Much respect Wranglerstar. Bringing up the situation where if you respond to active shooting the cops are more likely to shoot you first. Other youtubers gloss over that fact.
I have mentioned that to people in the prepping community before, walking around in an active shooter situation looking like a mercenary is a great way to get shot by SWAT, way too many guys have it in their heads that they are going to RAMBO their way through a dangerous situation and it'll get them killed
Worse, other citizens may shoot you thinking you're a government employee who is "here to help" Don't expect a friendly reception.. I see guys in full cammo and tac gear I'm not assuming they're good guys.
My med kit in Iraq in the first month had every emergency medical equipment you could think of. My last month consisted of 90% gauze, some IV fluids, and a tourniquet.
This video is such a breath of fresh air. The whole prep community should focus more on making what you already have work instead of buying the next greatest thing. Keep things affordable, practical and legally smart
Good video. Retired SOF operator. Gear fits your mission. No one set up fits every mission. I have 5 levels of gear. We used to laugh about the perfect set of kit. It’s like the perfect chainsaw or carbine or truck. It simply doesn’t exist. Enjoy your content. Stay safe.
i went to a rifle class a few week back and i was the only one who didn't have the high speed gear. had a rifle, a sling and an aiwb holster. the assistant instructor suggested a battle belt in case something goes bump in the night. i still outshot most if not all of the class. and was probably one of the only ones who wasn't damn near dead from all of the movement. your most important piece of gear will always be your health and your brain.
100% spot on on the health. what good is the 10's of thousands of gear that someone has on, when you get gassed when running 30-50m or cant walk more than a kilometer? that moment you are fucked.
SpecOps have: - A mission - prior intelligence - Teammates - Quick Reaction Force - Emergency medical extraction (probably) - Overwatch - Air support basically what 0% of civilians have, I think it's easy to get stuck on gear, as impractical as it may be, simply because we like shiny and new things, but it's very easy to hit the diminishing returns mark, and I think people who are into prep/survival should realize that. sooner rather than later. 🤣
Indeed sir! Training will prevail over almost everything! Stress your CNS and then train. Even dry runs without a drop of sweat or stress still carry over when things get spicy.
@@ivanfromtheeast4709physical fitness isn't the problem that can be fixed easily it's the mental part thats the problem its easier to Physically train someone rather than mentally train them
If I may add my two cents. I'm a retired cop of 15 years but have left now as i have no faith in my government. I was a undercover and surveillance cop for 8 of those years. In my work it was very under rated simply blending in. Anything molle draws eyes. Anything camo draws eyes. I used to walk around fully armoured up but i was dressed as a high voltage electricity installer. "HI VIZ" I carried a heavy pack full of weapons but it was a indescrete black duffle bag, and I never received any questions. While i loved your video and your videos in general id love to see more of a "grey man" element to it. Its all well and good to be able to engage and win but its even better to not have to engage at all. Crooks will always be drawn to anything tacticool...
Thanks for the insight and and thank you for your service. May I ask what kind of armor would you recommend that is discreet and still able to stop pistol and possibly rifle rounds?
@po69tato that's going to be a balancing act. Soft bodies are visibly like heavy tshirts and thus very easy to hide. Hard plate carrier you would need to conceal it under a vest of some description. Hence, why I always used high viz singlets. It's one of those you have to make a sacrifice somewhere. Soft body gear is getting very good now. It stops generic handguns and smaller long arms
@po69tato Another thing to consider is that even with a plate carrier. You still have an exposed neck head and legs. So it's not the total fix solution.
The final reason I don't mind a good soft body is that statistically in the US you are most likely to be shot with a 9mm handgun or a 22 cal rifle both will be stopped by soft bodies.
Dragged my wife to an "active shooter" class held by our local PD. In the intro speech, the officer set the context by saying "when we run into an active shooter situation, the first thing we think when we see ANYONE, is DO YOU NEED A BULLET??" Message received.....
@eternaladventure-wm5fn coward cops? we've never met, you don't know me or anything about me, but you feel comfortable calling me a coward. Says a lot of your low character.
@@davidcheatham7062I didn’t call you a coward cop but I now know you are because of how defensive you got. And yes, most cops are undertrained coward bullies that can barely shoot.
I've spent $800 on my rifle that I put together in my apartment, it's not hard to build a better cheap AR than what you can buy for a couple hundred more and that's with a decent optic
It's so easy to fall into that consumer, buy, buy, buy mentality. I'd been in it for 20 years. When the new thing kicked off a week or so ago, I found myself falling back into that mentality, and surfing websites. I stopped, and decided to go take a deep inventory of what all I have, in every facet of life. After pondering for a bit, I realized, that I'm comfortable where I'm at. I made a small order for 300 bucks and that's it, other than placing an order for freezer meat.
@@Jasoos_Jasonda not to justify the whole "buy buy buy" thing, but alot of people in countries that have fallen into unrest or been invaded said the same things.
I work with NSW and I'm always struck by how different SEAL team gear is to the gear I carried in the Army Infantry. Different missions definitely reflect in the gear a guy needs to carry.
The mission drives the gear. Yeah, it is definitely better than being infantry when it comes to gear. And training honestly. I have better gear at home than I was issued originally by the Army.
I work for the Navy as well, also a former army infantryman. Those dudes run some nice high speed stuff. I’ve taken some of their trade and added it to my toolbox. However, I have my gear set up for longterm sustainment. Infantry ought to be the model for civilians.
Having been in combat, I’ve seen people attach everything they can find to their vest and weapon the first few missions they do. It slowly gets reduced to what is needed and is required by leadership, and nothing else. This is because you get tired, things get caught up on vehicles and houses, etc, and things get lost also. Many reasons. But the kit always got reduced to what was needed.
This is gonna sound nerdy, but I have also seen the same thing in Airsoft games. Even casually larping with all that gear quickly teaches you to bring as little as possible, so hopefully, people would carry that over to real life.
I've slowly done this with my fishing kit. As a kid I'd carry around a giant tackle box with all these different lures. Most of them were expensive and I was scared to use them. My arm would be hurting before I even wet a line. Now 20 years later, I carry a children's backpack, containing a single Plano box of random lures and a few small bags of soft plastic baits, and the cheapest rod and reel combo I found at walmart. I even keep the amount of water on me to a minimum. I'm not going to die of thirst next to a flowing river.
@@828enigma6you can fix diarrhea and water borne illness vs death from lack of water. Always carry a basic water filter or means to boil water over a fire.
You don’t live in the real world obviously. You familiar with the war in Afghanistan? Just like Vietnam it was fought against poor guys with poor equipment that were highly motivated in the beliefs. Both wars were quagmires. Solid, base equipment is a necessity for any man who wants to make sure that tyranny isn’t the order of the day. Along with at minimal the base equipment a man must have good consistent training and the ability to formulate simple plans to cover likely scenarios. Do you know that the US Army doctrine states that troops shall not undertake direct action missions without full knowledge of how many combatants are on sight because for every 1 enemy combatant it requires a minimum of 10 troops. If we don’t have 10 to one odds we don’t take the fight. That says a lot about what one highly motivated man is capable of. Go be a Karen elsewhere. You’re not wanted here.
@@erictheboringone5292yea, there was a grampa in mexico who took a bunch of mexican cartel guys with a shotgun an a rifle, fighting against aks and uzis. Dkn Alejo Garza was the guy.
@@erictheboringone5292 Wow you didn't read his comment correctly at all. He's talking about things people put on their kit that have no meaning being on a kit unless you are "supported by a well-funded military". Things like IR strobe markers for CAS, $40k GPNVG, $20k MPU5 radio that doesn't work unless you have an extensive comms network, etc.
As a police officer, my belt IFAK is two chest seals, a compressed roll of clotting gauze, and folded up duct tape. This keeps it from being too fat on my belt. And honestly, I’m not going to be using anything like a damn decompression needle on a shooting scene. I carry tourniquets elsewhere for ease of access. As far as the active shooter scenario, YES! There are high speed dudes at each department, but that’s a small portion. And even then those situations would have anyone close to having tunnel vision.
So sadly TRUE!😬 Too many people like to LOOK LIKE they know what they're doing, when they actually don't know a damn thing, and that can and will be a very dangerous situation for them and other people around them💥😕
Been using FUPA carry for about a month. It's great for motorcycles and even going around towns in nicer/work clothes. The ability to carry full size comfortably with 2 spare mags and a med kit has been a game changer.
@@wranglerstar-I’ve been seeing them around. Not a lot, but a few. More open carry for the most part. And of course normal concealed carry, who knows how many are around… which is the point. Do you think that people will catch on that these fupa bags have guns in them?
I would say it definitely depends on your needs but for most people, regular milsurp or LEO gear works fine in most cases so you don’t always have to go Gucci Garand Thumb to have a decent kit
This is true, though, you really don't want to be too obvious with it. Plus, there is no hard rule that says you need everything up to current milspec standards. Because lets get real here, most of the threats we face are going to be half assed equipped at best. A good rule of thumb is get the best you can and make do.
No! As one of the ultra elite timecops, I must have my Peq-15 and Elcan spectre DR on my trusty Hipoint 995. There is no substitute for someone in such a dangerous profession.
The last several years I've been keeping a get home bag. It's about 15 lbs total. A couple of granola bars, a straw water filter, rain poncho, firearm flashlight and small tarp, battery backup for my phone, personal items and very small med kit (not a triage kit). It also varies depending on season That's it, everything's at home that I need.
I have always appreciated your practical approach to things, as well as your ability to adapt and improve over time with learning and experience. It's the true sign of someone who is among the lifelong students of the world, constantly expanding in knowledge and acting accordingly.
Key concept here is getting home, it’s refreshing to hear someone bring all this stuff up I’m right there with ya. I wish there was more city situation type stuff being addressed.
Make sure your kit is appropriate to the environment you primarily live in. I did some training recently with local guys from my area. I wear Vietnam area gear because the environment is dense Forrest, swamps and many deep rivers and creeks. They kinda chuckled when I didn’t have a high speed plate carrier or helmet. About 45 mins into it we had our first guy go down to heat, several weren’t able to cross a river for fear of drowning. By the end they were bone dry from lack of not bringing enough water and losing a ton of sweat. Choose your equipment wisely.
Sounds like Northern Texas/Southern Oklahoma. The heat is murder, and the terrain will definitely tear you up if you aren't prepared. Never underestimate the old ALICE LBE rig. Love it. You can pop a small plate carrier under it if need be as well.
@@orion8981 it’s 100 degrees with 99% humidity plate carriers are not happening, swamps, rivers etc… you might be able to wear them temporarily but not for extended outings.
I'm a cop in a large city. Young, in good shape. CC is a necessity and your most practical tool. Your mindset here is smart, your main goal is to get away. Also, I recently got a baby tuna automatic. Awesome watch.
I've found my old LRRP setup from the 80s is perfect for my uses. I carry 9 AR mags,sidearm, 4 spare mags,bayonet, 2 first aid pouches and an IFAK and 2 canteens and a flashlight. It's simple, cheap and does the job.
I hated when the regular army started "standardizing" the combat load layout. Well, that doesn't work for me so I was on a live shoot house and just going real slow. CSM asked why I'm so slow. I told him if I had the layout I had in Iraq I'd be faster. He let me change my loadout and sure enough, 1.5 minutes faster. He said he talk to the BC and 3 days later the "standard" layout got changed to "soldier preference"
@@mattmurphy7030 100% layout. That was the only difference. I had everything prescribed in the SOP and even a few extras (like radio, dump pouch, and extra tourniquet.) It's just about what works for you and a ton of experimentation.
So right about not being a one man army. I know so many people who let their ego get in the way of rational decisions, the safest thing a man can do is protect himself and his family, and that doesn’t mean being a hero .
@@sidecharacter7165 very few, even those with training haven’t had to use them (me) Most people only “answer the call to action” as a form of pride. They don’t really have a plan, and are not equipped to deal with an emergency. (Kyle rittenhouse) and that married couple who stood on their front porch, armed with a rifle and a dinky pistol. I don’t doubt that these people do have somewhat honest intentions, but the main thing they’re trying to do is send a message. Not a hill I would die on.
So, for all the high-speed warriors who think you need all this trash, look at our adversaries: Viet Cong, Taliban, and so forth; beat the world's most significant fighting force in the world with man jammies, an AK, and sandals. Your mind is your greatest weapon; learn from your enemies, and know helmet and ceramic plates are great, but the Lord has already determined your day to meet him.
Defeated is a laughable statement the only reason the Vietnamese won was the south didnt want to fight. Same for Afghanistan the local power didnt want to fight. Going up against the US in armed conflict will erase a generation. Without the proper kit and skill Going up against professionals is a death sentence.
I agree that with “preparedness” that there is a law of diminishing returns. I suppose that the vast majority of us watching your channel have come to terms with the fact that the stakes have never been higher but will also never be this low again. 2024 is going to be the ride of our existence.
I love this philosophy. The KISS principle (keep it simple stupid) is very applicable here. Use what you have and don't overcomplicate things. The more items added to an AR build equals more variables to execute, but also more points of failure. I'll be saving this video for reference and watching it repeatedly in the future. Thanks Wranglestar! You're a walking book of wisdom.
@wranglerstar you are my longest subscription. I've loved your channel through every stage of its growth. This one hit home in a lot of ways and I appreciate the candor and old school reflection. Be well, brother. All the best to the family.
I've explored these same thoughts before. Like having a 10.5 PSA with a law folder that I can throw in a backpack with some L210 plates, medical, and a holster. You gave me some ideas. Great vid. Btw, I'm here bc the Dirty Civilian guys shared this video 😎
Great info Cody. I've been overseas, also I've been COTUS when I got caught in a riot (mostly peaceful) during riot in I was carrying concealed with 2 buddies who were not. We all felt a bit safe knowing that NOBODY else knew I was carrying. It's not always about carrying a big stick, it's about having said stick and knowing when to whack someone with it.
I just want to say I love you man. Been watching for many years now, crazy times we live in. I remember initially following for your knowledge in homesteading and bushcraft. Much respect
God bless you, Cody. You're a man with a lot of wisdom, and, not the least, a good heart. You'll do well in the coming crisis, I'm sure, being able to sustain your family when every other earthly support is cut off. A comforting thought is that when the door of mercy is finally closed, the faithful will be on the safe side eternity, no matter what befalls them in the remaining days of this old world.
Am i the only one who was waiting for him to come to the realization he didnt need all that on his mk18? Loved the clean simple look of your mk18 build video. Nice to see you going back to that. Good job sir
It seems that you have came to the same conclusion that many special forces operators, partisans, PMC contractors and regular soldiers that have been in real battles come to - less is more.
One thing I love about being in the rural Deep South: camo and long guns are extremely common…especially in the fall and winter when our big hunting seasons kickoff.
I love this concept. I've been working on my set up with a lot of this in mind for a while. I’ve tried to center around capability and flexibility. This is what I have settled on so far... Still a work in progress. Carry - Glock 23, Not the best but it’s reliable and does off the ability to switch to 9mm with a simple barrel change (can’t change a 19 to “23” without changing the slide). You can switch the mags and guid rod if you really want but it’s just more to carry. Changing only the barrel is not the perfect solution but it does offer a backup option in a pinch without much additional gear/weight. In the car - I drive an early 2000’s Honda, not know for their security. So the idea of leaving a usable firearm in my vehicle is not something I am comfortable with. Enter the Hera Arms Triarii. Anything you can put on your AR can be put on the Triarii, including buffer tubes and stocks. It’s small enough it will fit into most bags (with a folding stock) but still not a big deal if you have to leave it in your vehicle. Just drop your pistol in and you’ve got a PDW/SBR. They also offer chassis for pistols other than Glock (CZ, S&W, SIG, H&K, and Walther). The main downsides, aside from it being and SBR and all that entails, may be price, having to remove an optic from your carry pistol to put in the chassis and as far as I know they’re not compatible with suppressors due to how the barrels move when cycling. For hearing pro I am looking at the Walker bluetooth ear buds. EVERYONE uses ear buds now days so you can always wear them and no one will say anything. Plus because they are bluetooth they will work for more than just shooting. Still working through my bags and rigs but right now I am using an old first gen 5.11 Rush 24, military issue tanker tool bag (perfect size for the Triarii), and a generic sling bag. Quick tip for camouflaging your bag. T-shirts. Throw a t-shirt over it, run the top of the straps through the arms down to the bottom, the grab handle through the neck and you're good to go. Terrain or weather changes, just change the shirt.
Man, I sometimes hate what you say. Sometimes, I love what you say. No matter which, though, I respect what you say. You never come off dishonest. Good on you mate..
You're absolutely correct in my humble opinion. It's easy to get wrapped up in the whole "high speed operator" stuff. In reality it's not what the majority of us are. Period. We are simply Americans who want to be prepared for anything and if we can lend a hand or protect innocent life we certainly will. That being said, running around with the kit of a top tier operator is stupid. You nailed it with this video. I agree with you 100% on this one. Well done sir
Indeed. They are "high speed," because they have gathered intel and rehearsed their plan of attack. I guarantee you if they find themselves wandering blind into unknown territory, "high speed" is the last thing they'll be doing. "Move fast, shoot straight," is great if you know where you're going. Not so great if you have zero intel.
About leaving stuff in your vehicle, some cars are like blinking signs for break in or carjacking. Gray man should have a gray car. I once knew an old guy who’s car seat was torn and split. That’s where he kept his pistol.
3rd gen acura TL's are a little fancy looking, but rear seats are bolted in and there's a killswitch in the glovebox for the trunk latch. The hatch in the seat has a lock too so you can't pull the emergency open cord. This is definitely an exception though and it's way better to be grey.
@@Greatwhitesloth I was also thinking, looking into a car you don’t see the headliner. Velcro and/or magnet to hold stuff to the inside of the cars roof might be a good idea?
I love this bringing people back to basics and realistic. From my time in the infantry this is so true start with basics and as the mission creeps into larger demands, gear up from thier.
I wandered away a few years ago and am now just re-engaging with this channel. This content is more to my way of thinking. When the shtf and I’m in an urban environment, I want to blend and not have high end gear that could spot light me. This video helps me think differently. Thank you
If you have an extra 40-50k.... Go ahead & larp... but if you're not fit and highly trained... it will just be a lead weight on your ankles when you think it's the shiznit...= get you killed. Main thing is to have the capability to make holes, plug holes, sustain a set duration of engagement behind cover / concealment.
Consider a poncho as an alternative to the vest. It will hide the plate carrier and can be donned much faster. Ponchos also can be made into a quick emergency shelter. I would also recommend considering a chest rig or placard system as they allow you to easily scale your gear depending on the situation.
Just for the sheer fact that you say things like " that's something I don't know anything about" among other things, you have my sub. I think your honesty is a very good eye opener for a lot of us here. Honesty starts with the self, I'm excited to see more of your content.
My favorite LARPer-ism is only carrying 4 mags because their favorite SOF dude does, not realizing the SOF kit is set up for a sub 24hr mission, he's got at least 11 other dudes with him, and they have belt feds and grenade launchers. Infantry in Ukraine right now have moved from 7 mags to 12 for their standard combat load because 7 was hardly getting them through a single mission, let alone follow on tasks. Civilians don't have QRF or a logistics train following them, pack accordingly.
The best way of looking at things is the Vietnam war era conflict and how they packed their kit it’s the most practical and realistic way of doing things
I have been thinking a lot along the same lines. I live literally on the other side of the country from you so I’ve had to think about different weather situations but I’ve started changing up my EDC more for convenience and just getting home. My state is alot less authoritarian than yours so I have a strong stand you ground laws that help me be more flexible about my identity in bad situations but still the same the goal is to make it home with my family safe. One of your best videos to date.
Hey beloved! I just wanted to say that I love you and your humor, and especially love your content. I'm just a regular guy in a fairly new marriage with a child on the way and your content has provided so much wisdom for me to glean from. I want to say thank you from the bottom of my heart for the work you do to reach such a forgotten audience of young men. I can tell you're a man of God, and I pray you're blessed in everything you do. Thanks, brother.
i learned the hard way of setting up a kit in country. A lot of trial and error. Started looking like a Call of Duty operator and ending up cutting it down and taking what is needed. Thanks for this humbling vid. Keep doing what you do.
A simple lesson learned early on at Benning... Ounces equal pounds-pounds equal pain. All the cool stuff is awesome, but it is also more weight that most of us aren't prepared for. Great video as always
We packed ifaks with nuttinfancey Learned tractor drivebys with Hickok45 Made our mosins rock with iv8888 And we shitposted with Garandthumb Now, we prepare for the fall with papa wranglerstar
Nice video. I have gone through this transformation recently as well. I also went to a nondescript duffle and downsized a little. I went with a lightweight 16” AR with a 1-6 because of my local area. Instead of a low pro plate carrier, I opted for a minimalist chest rig that I can wear under a pack comfortably (your slick back plate carrier wouldn’t be too bad). Again, great vid.
Yes. You are correct in every regard. 1. Get a chest rig. Chest rigs fit over a coat and different layers. And they are less expensive then the whole plate carrier. 2. Run your carrier slick. 3. Use a backpack as your plate carrier. 4. Hold your gear in a big bag like what you have. Pilot kit bags are perfect for this. 5. I would think a short shotgun would be better for the role than a AR pistol. But either will work. The whole point is to be able to stash or take gear off with ease. This kind of stuff is more suited for us, since we are looked at as bad actors.
I agree with everything you said except the shotgun part. The chest rig/slick plate carrier combo is great, as long as you choose the right combo. Chest rigs with H-harness work better than the X harness. That’s just my experience. I love the ability to dress down without having to take my plate carrier off, thats a big plus in a combat zone. And I like having the option to go without armor and have something more breathable in the summer months.
I would consider adding some buffer under the plates. Bare plates are good at stopping smaller caliber, fragments and buckshot. But when a bigger projectile hits, even without penetration, it may break your ribs and even make your heart stop. I believe they are standard issue in every army and most see them as means of ventilation, those 2-3 centimeters can make a big difference.
@@scottgrandy531 Tbf, I'd rather trade plates for a better rig setup with ammunition and sustainment from a purely civilian standpoint. Ideally you avoid confrontation as much as possible in an environment where gunfights might occur to begin with, and the likelihood that someone lands solid, body mass shots and doesn't happen to clip an arm or your lower abdomen is low. Plates only really prevent a lot of fragmentation in most use cases and if someone is peppering you with rifle rounds you're not surviving regardless of your plates.
Great thoughts. You always have a different perspective than whatever people are currently saying and take into account “common man” considerations. I’ve learned a lot watching you. Much appreciated.
Great video. As someone who is shopping, opened my eyes a lot. Thank you. Now I can go in smart and not waste money and time on the spec ops gear...not a spec ops guy.
Another thing to think about: Camo is cool, for sure, but do you want to look like the government boys if things get bad? Probably not. My friend says it pretty well; don't become a loot drop for someone else.
❤ thank you for your incite, and everything you do on this platform. Some of my ki set ups inspirations are from you and my dad. If you want to hide plates, use a 2x large hoodie or heavy hoodie.
Love the practical argument! Always a great ongoing continuous discussion. We have to grow and adapt. Thank you for the living and breathing flow of reality and thought.
Your approach is very practical and certainly mature. I can't help but equating this with the Minutemen of the American Revolution. They were not the professionally trained and equipped Continental Army. They employed what they had at hand and on stand-by at a moment's notice to repel the British. This coming from a Canadian whose own militia stood ready to augment the sparse British regulars to repel larger American armies that invaded our territory. Hey, we won too! One can never underestimate the role and value of the militia. Amen.
Yes but militia are backed up by intelligence and most the time are in preparation for a certain mission but for the common civilian it’s not beneficial
Dude, the common civilian is supposed to be the militia. At least in the States we are supposed to be decentralized fighters capable if irregular warfare without a unified command structure. What you are talking about is a defense force or an army.@@ifreezetvcomics
@@ifreezetvcomics What are you even talking about? A militia IS the common civilian. If your "militia" is reporting to a government agency, surprise surprise, you aren't a militia, you are just government pawns they get to use as a scapegoat should things go sideways.
Can you give me an example where a militia overthrow their government without the help of another country providing weapons or having political/ military alliance within their own government?
FINALLY SOMEONE WHO TALKS ABOUT IMPORTANT THINGS LIKE THIS!!! Thank you for bringing up this important topic, I'm so tired of people thinking that they are going to be the cool SOF guys and not just sitting in a trench hiding from artillery...
Cody!! This video has been needed for a long time! Thank you for this, recovering from the same head cold here and was fiddling with key gear over the weekend. Thank you brother, your LS are missed!!
Honestly, concealable soft armor might be the way to go. Something that could take plates if you want them. Just run a chest rig over it if you need the kitchen sink
I live in a medium town in SE Georgia. I went to a protest during the Summer of Love. I concealed full size plates front and back in a carrier and a pistol with extra mags on a belt that I wore just beneath my plates (as opposed to at my hips) all under a leather jacket. Unfortunately it was a little warm for the jacket so I looked a little off. I know the cops made me because my inlaws were glued to the police scanner, but no one else paid any attention to me, and the cops didn't do anything more than keep an eye on me.
K.I.S.S. Don't try to carry all the gadgets and gear to cover every situation when statistically, being in a situation that requires all that stuff is very highly unlikely. Be prepared for what is most likely to happen, which is thugs trying to rob or carjack you, not some complete societal breakdown. If you get caught up in a riot, you haven't been paying attention to what's going on, there are warning signs before things like that happen. If there's a high profile racial court case anywhere in the country whose verdict is due at any time, don't go into the city. If there's some political rally or some kind of controversial political decision taking place, don't go into the city. If there's a championship game on, especially if it's the home team of your nearest big city, don't be in town when it ends. If the race baiters are calling for protests for whatever reason, don't go into the city. Just plain don't be in the city after dark because that's when most riots and crimes seem to happen.
I almost bought a full on high speed plate carrier and the whole nine yards the other day and after I thought about it I decided not to. I need a manual well pump in case of emergency a lot more. I think Clint Smith once said that armor is only good if the guy shooting at you can hit the plate
Instead of continuously stripping down and building back up your carrier you should have two. One slick like the lv119 or the trexarms Ac1 that can be worn under a rain jacket easily without it being obvious and still have couple rifle mags, ifak, radio etc.. and another carrier thats built to carry more weight like a JPC 2.0 with your more ‘’deployment/ combat’’ type gear that cant be worn low vis but that offers significantly more capabilities. Have both built for their specific desired uses and have both ready to go. A lot better than stripping/adding stuff to the same carrier. Thats a plan to forget something important and not have it the day you would of needed it. Mags and ifaks should be had in double or triple and be dedicated to a specific setup so wtv. You decide to grab and go on that day your sure tou have everything that’s been added to that specific kit.
I'm a newb who was near 100% firearms ignorant until 53 years of age when I woke up to the NWO & built my first AR. I've learned aLOT of things since then. NONE of those things make me any sort of soldier much less a tactically trained agent. At 122lbs I'm also not the guy you send to kick a door down for a breach & clear. I see alot of cool gear I'd love to get to know but it's not about being "cool". It's about being an effective civilian agent in defense of freedom and when luxury affords, survival. I DO hope I get some good exposure to skull mounted night optics at some point. $2,500-$3,500 for quality functional night optics is not an unreasonable price in my opinion. How sad I've had to learn more about my government and the Constitution at a well staffed firearms dealer than I did in school. Shame on our State Run Indoctrication system and Shame on us for letting this happen.
I am in your same boat good sir, I’m 42 and rushing to get prepared. I have had my LTC for 2 yrs now, I am proficient and comfortable with my Glock and carry spare mags at all times. Have yet to shoot or train with my carbine, but just paid for defensive carbine training in December. I do regret not joining the military in my 20’s to serve my country, get good training and practice in. Stay strong and god bless 🇺🇸
Mental illness is the no. 1 reason why people feel the need to arm themselves as paramilitaries in peacetime. Might be better addressing the issues that cause you to feel the need to play soldiers decades after you got your last GI Joe toy.
Much respect Wranglerstar. Bringing up the situation where if you respond to active shooting the cops are more likely to shoot you first. Other youtubers gloss over that fact.
I have mentioned that to people in the prepping community before, walking around in an active shooter situation looking like a mercenary is a great way to get shot by SWAT, way too many guys have it in their heads that they are going to RAMBO their way through a dangerous situation and it'll get them killed
@@JackClemens-fx2ix 🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡🤡
How could we stand by and do nothing? That would not sit still with me....just need to be smart and act fast and accurate.
Worse, other citizens may shoot you thinking you're a government employee who is "here to help" Don't expect a friendly reception.. I see guys in full cammo and tac gear I'm not assuming they're good guys.
Unless you are trained armed security / police you should simply try to shelter or get away. Take care of your family first.
My med kit in Iraq in the first month had every emergency medical equipment you could think of. My last month consisted of 90% gauze, some IV fluids, and a tourniquet.
That’s really interesting information. Thank you.
What's your point? There's a chain of custody from triage to transport to stabilization to definitive care. You gonna have that in SHTF?
@@IDNeon357🤡
I hope more than one tourniquet 😂
@@jacobcarter5923 it's for him, if you want a tourniquet you'll have to bring your own. 😉
This video is such a breath of fresh air. The whole prep community should focus more on making what you already have work instead of buying the next greatest thing. Keep things affordable, practical and legally smart
Prepping has become an expensive Hobby for most. When they get separated from their supplies at Home, they will be helpless.
True. most of that is nothing but marketing.
Agreed. Great principles discussed here.
Good video. Retired SOF operator. Gear fits your mission. No one set up fits every mission. I have 5 levels of gear. We used to laugh about the perfect set of kit. It’s like the perfect chainsaw or carbine or truck. It simply doesn’t exist. Enjoy your content. Stay safe.
Woah now Anthony
The six wheel drive mercedes is the best truck.
You have never used any gear as a civilian and you never will.
i went to a rifle class a few week back and i was the only one who didn't have the high speed gear. had a rifle, a sling and an aiwb holster. the assistant instructor suggested a battle belt in case something goes bump in the night. i still outshot most if not all of the class. and was probably one of the only ones who wasn't damn near dead from all of the movement. your most important piece of gear will always be your health and your brain.
The biggest challenge is the wall you climb in your mind.
100% spot on on the health. what good is the 10's of thousands of gear that someone has on, when you get gassed when running 30-50m or cant walk more than a kilometer? that moment you are fucked.
Exactly
But also, battle belts are nice ;)
@@frankthetank3342very nice
SpecOps have:
- A mission
- prior intelligence
- Teammates
- Quick Reaction Force
- Emergency medical extraction (probably)
- Overwatch
- Air support
basically what 0% of civilians have, I think it's easy to get stuck on gear, as impractical as it may be, simply because we like shiny and new things, but it's very easy to hit the diminishing returns mark, and I think people who are into prep/survival should realize that. sooner rather than later. 🤣
Indeed sir! Training will prevail over almost everything! Stress your CNS and then train. Even dry runs without a drop of sweat or stress still carry over when things get spicy.
@@Strrovnot to mention physical fitness is an issue
speak for yourself
@@ivanfromtheeast4709physical fitness isn't the problem that can be fixed easily it's the mental part thats the problem its easier to Physically train someone rather than mentally train them
It’s better to learn basic survival over all the cool spec ops stuff
I think of myself as a Special Forces guy in the sense of the Special Olympics.
That got me in the feels
Bravo.
Brother
Hell yeah borther
I resemble that remark!
If I may add my two cents. I'm a retired cop of 15 years but have left now as i have no faith in my government. I was a undercover and surveillance cop for 8 of those years. In my work it was very under rated simply blending in. Anything molle draws eyes. Anything camo draws eyes. I used to walk around fully armoured up but i was dressed as a high voltage electricity installer. "HI VIZ" I carried a heavy pack full of weapons but it was a indescrete black duffle bag, and I never received any questions. While i loved your video and your videos in general id love to see more of a "grey man" element to it. Its all well and good to be able to engage and win but its even better to not have to engage at all. Crooks will always be drawn to anything tacticool...
Thanks for the insight and and thank you for your service. May I ask what kind of armor would you recommend that is discreet and still able to stop pistol and possibly rifle rounds?
@po69tato that's going to be a balancing act. Soft bodies are visibly like heavy tshirts and thus very easy to hide. Hard plate carrier you would need to conceal it under a vest of some description. Hence, why I always used high viz singlets. It's one of those you have to make a sacrifice somewhere. Soft body gear is getting very good now. It stops generic handguns and smaller long arms
@po69tato Another thing to consider is that even with a plate carrier. You still have an exposed neck head and legs. So it's not the total fix solution.
The final reason I don't mind a good soft body is that statistically in the US you are most likely to be shot with a 9mm handgun or a 22 cal rifle both will be stopped by soft bodies.
Well said
My conceal pistol is simply for getting me from point A to point B. Point B being my rifle, body armor, and family.
You would choke and be killed if u ever actually had to use them.
@@thomasmills3934what are people like you saying that to people for? Are you CIA signature reduction?
How could you possibly know that? You might be responding to a mercenary or a trained birthday taker.
@@thomasmills3934 Death doesn't bother me, I'll finally be with the Father. Rid yourself of your demons and get right with Jesus.
@@thomasmills3934people like you... der...
Dragged my wife to an "active shooter" class held by our local PD. In the intro speech, the officer set the context by saying "when we run into an active shooter situation, the first thing we think when we see ANYONE, is DO YOU NEED A BULLET??" Message received.....
I hate cops
That is how cops think whenever and wherever they go. Violent animals.
That’s “if” they run in. Don’t leave your familys and other peoples safety up to undertrained coward cops.
@eternaladventure-wm5fn coward cops? we've never met, you don't know me or anything about me, but you feel comfortable calling me a coward. Says a lot of your low character.
@@davidcheatham7062I didn’t call you a coward cop but I now know you are because of how defensive you got. And yes, most cops are undertrained coward bullies that can barely shoot.
Better to have a $500 rifle and spend $2000 on range time and training than buy a $2500 rifle that sits in safe looking awesome.
I've spent $800 on my rifle that I put together in my apartment, it's not hard to build a better cheap AR than what you can buy for a couple hundred more and that's with a decent optic
* 1000$ rifle (inflation) 😂
@@bladeking2013 meh $1000 isn't expensive for a rifle
@@wendigoactual8325 that was kind of the joke that due to inflation $1000 is the new $500, bad joke, apparently😅
@@bladeking2013 not really, I remember in 2009 a basic m&p was $899.99 lol
It's so easy to fall into that consumer, buy, buy, buy mentality. I'd been in it for 20 years. When the new thing kicked off a week or so ago, I found myself falling back into that mentality, and surfing websites. I stopped, and decided to go take a deep inventory of what all I have, in every facet of life. After pondering for a bit, I realized, that I'm comfortable where I'm at. I made a small order for 300 bucks and that's it, other than placing an order for freezer meat.
Do you actually think that would happen in the US. Hardly…
I can completely understand you. I felt the same after this events.
@@Jasoos_Jasonda not to justify the whole "buy buy buy" thing, but alot of people in countries that have fallen into unrest or been invaded said the same things.
@@Jasoos_JasondaAnything can happen.
@@Jasoos_Jasondaright, CHOP/CHAZ didn’t happen. You nailed it.
I work with NSW and I'm always struck by how different SEAL team gear is to the gear I carried in the Army Infantry. Different missions definitely reflect in the gear a guy needs to carry.
Well yea they have an unlimited gear budget…regular troops don’t.
Yep
Are you on the west or east coast ? That’s awesome you found your way into a GS job!
The mission drives the gear. Yeah, it is definitely better than being infantry when it comes to gear. And training honestly. I have better gear at home than I was issued originally by the Army.
I work for the Navy as well, also a former army infantryman. Those dudes run some nice high speed stuff. I’ve taken some of their trade and added it to my toolbox. However, I have my gear set up for longterm sustainment. Infantry ought to be the model for civilians.
Having been in combat, I’ve seen people attach everything they can find to their vest and weapon the first few missions they do. It slowly gets reduced to what is needed and is required by leadership, and nothing else. This is because you get tired, things get caught up on vehicles and houses, etc, and things get lost also. Many reasons. But the kit always got reduced to what was needed.
I heard this same thing. New guys have everything on their rifle but end up with just a pistol grip.
This is gonna sound nerdy, but I have also seen the same thing in Airsoft games. Even casually larping with all that gear quickly teaches you to bring as little as possible, so hopefully, people would carry that over to real life.
Same with new sailors especially😂
I've slowly done this with my fishing kit. As a kid I'd carry around a giant tackle box with all these different lures. Most of them were expensive and I was scared to use them. My arm would be hurting before I even wet a line. Now 20 years later, I carry a children's backpack, containing a single Plano box of random lures and a few small bags of soft plastic baits, and the cheapest rod and reel combo I found at walmart. I even keep the amount of water on me to a minimum. I'm not going to die of thirst next to a flowing river.
Too bad we have to think about all this b.s. around us nowadays but wetting a line helps me cope
No, but you may quite ill from drinking untreated water.
@@828enigma6just a get life straw or something similar
Based liquid shitter
@@828enigma6you can fix diarrhea and water borne illness vs death from lack of water. Always carry a basic water filter or means to boil water over a fire.
Most of that equipment is supported by a well-funded military. On its own, it's mostly just extra weight.
You don’t live in the real world obviously. You familiar with the war in Afghanistan? Just like Vietnam it was fought against poor guys with poor equipment that were highly motivated in the beliefs. Both wars were quagmires. Solid, base equipment is a necessity for any man who wants to make sure that tyranny isn’t the order of the day. Along with at minimal the base equipment a man must have good consistent training and the ability to formulate simple plans to cover likely scenarios. Do you know that the US Army doctrine states that troops shall not undertake direct action missions without full knowledge of how many combatants are on sight because for every 1 enemy combatant it requires a minimum of 10 troops. If we don’t have 10 to one odds we don’t take the fight. That says a lot about what one highly motivated man is capable of. Go be a Karen elsewhere. You’re not wanted here.
@@erictheboringone5292yea, there was a grampa in mexico who took a bunch of mexican cartel guys with a shotgun an a rifle, fighting against aks and uzis. Dkn Alejo Garza was the guy.
@@erictheboringone5292 Wow you didn't read his comment correctly at all. He's talking about things people put on their kit that have no meaning being on a kit unless you are "supported by a well-funded military". Things like IR strobe markers for CAS, $40k GPNVG, $20k MPU5 radio that doesn't work unless you have an extensive comms network, etc.
Brits said years ago Ameicans had too much kit, during WW2
@@airsoftdude36 I'm glad someone can read.
So glad to hear your strategy walk back from solo hero to common man defense.
As a police officer, my belt IFAK is two chest seals, a compressed roll of clotting gauze, and folded up duct tape. This keeps it from being too fat on my belt. And honestly, I’m not going to be using anything like a damn decompression needle on a shooting scene. I carry tourniquets elsewhere for ease of access.
As far as the active shooter scenario, YES! There are high speed dudes at each department, but that’s a small portion. And even then those situations would have anyone close to having tunnel vision.
@@phillipbanes5484 That... seems like quite the leap in logic, given everything the OP said.
Leave the decompression needles to us EMS guys, please 😅 just make sure I don't get shanked on-scene and we're good
@@Gottaculat He's a troll. He's copy/pasted that comment on several others. Doesn't even make sense.
Everybody wants to be Special Forces…until it’s time to do Special Forces stuff!
but nobody wants to hump the pack
Not really. Doing SF stuff was my favorite part of SF.
So sadly TRUE!😬 Too many people like to LOOK LIKE they know what they're doing, when they actually don't know a damn thing, and that can and will be a very dangerous situation for them and other people around them💥😕
That's true
Exactly
Been using FUPA carry for about a month. It's great for motorcycles and even going around towns in nicer/work clothes. The ability to carry full size comfortably with 2 spare mags and a med kit has been a game changer.
Same here,
@@wranglerstar-I’ve been seeing them around. Not a lot, but a few. More open carry for the most part. And of course normal concealed carry, who knows how many are around… which is the point. Do you think that people will catch on that these fupa bags have guns in them?
Where can a man get a good FUPA?
@@jayman3122 vertx scop sling or hill people gear runners kit bag sling are amazing options
@@jayman3122 SOE gear.
I would say it definitely depends on your needs but for most people, regular milsurp or LEO gear works fine in most cases so you don’t always have to go Gucci Garand Thumb to have a decent kit
Yup! A PASGT helm can be had for 60$ it stops pistol rounds and is headset, NVGs compatible
Don’t disregard my flannel daddy
This is true, though, you really don't want to be too obvious with it. Plus, there is no hard rule that says you need everything up to current milspec standards. Because lets get real here, most of the threats we face are going to be half assed equipped at best. A good rule of thumb is get the best you can and make do.
No! As one of the ultra elite timecops, I must have my Peq-15 and Elcan spectre DR on my trusty Hipoint 995. There is no substitute for someone in such a dangerous profession.
@@votagolol
The last several years I've been keeping a get home bag. It's about 15 lbs total. A couple of granola bars, a straw water filter, rain poncho, firearm flashlight and small tarp, battery backup for my phone, personal items and very small med kit (not a triage kit). It also varies depending on season That's it, everything's at home that I need.
I have always appreciated your practical approach to things, as well as your ability to adapt and improve over time with learning and experience.
It's the true sign of someone who is among the lifelong students of the world, constantly expanding in knowledge and acting accordingly.
Key concept here is getting home, it’s refreshing to hear someone bring all this stuff up I’m right there with ya. I wish there was more city situation type stuff being addressed.
This video is a conversation that needed to be had with a lot of these guys for a long time now. Thanks Wranglestar! Couldn’t have said it better.
Wranglestar is the epitome of The salt of the Earth.
Make sure your kit is appropriate to the environment you primarily live in. I did some training recently with local guys from my area. I wear Vietnam area gear because the environment is dense Forrest, swamps and many deep rivers and creeks. They kinda chuckled when I didn’t have a high speed plate carrier or helmet. About 45 mins into it we had our first guy go down to heat, several weren’t able to cross a river for fear of drowning. By the end they were bone dry from lack of not bringing enough water and losing a ton of sweat. Choose your equipment wisely.
Sounds like Northern Texas/Southern Oklahoma. The heat is murder, and the terrain will definitely tear you up if you aren't prepared. Never underestimate the old ALICE LBE rig. Love it. You can pop a small plate carrier under it if need be as well.
@@CommunismIsCringe Deep South Georgia actually but I know Texas has similar terrain. Plate Carriers will get you killed in that environment
That's more of a hydration, poor planning, and fitness issue than a gear issue.
@@orion8981 it’s 100 degrees with 99% humidity plate carriers are not happening, swamps, rivers etc… you might be able to wear them temporarily but not for extended outings.
@@iamthelizardking6239 JRTC is a place. I've been in that place. It's miserable.
It's also completely doable if you hydrate.
I'm a cop in a large city. Young, in good shape. CC is a necessity and your most practical tool. Your mindset here is smart, your main goal is to get away. Also, I recently got a baby tuna automatic. Awesome watch.
I've found my old LRRP setup from the 80s is perfect for my uses. I carry 9 AR mags,sidearm, 4 spare mags,bayonet, 2 first aid pouches and an IFAK and 2 canteens and a flashlight. It's simple, cheap and does the job.
I hated when the regular army started "standardizing" the combat load layout. Well, that doesn't work for me so I was on a live shoot house and just going real slow. CSM asked why I'm so slow. I told him if I had the layout I had in Iraq I'd be faster. He let me change my loadout and sure enough, 1.5 minutes faster. He said he talk to the BC and 3 days later the "standard" layout got changed to "soldier preference"
The flexibility should 100% be a must
What were the major differences between the slow kit and the fast kit?
@@mattmurphy7030 100% layout. That was the only difference. I had everything prescribed in the SOP and even a few extras (like radio, dump pouch, and extra tourniquet.) It's just about what works for you and a ton of experimentation.
I really enjoyed your down-to-earth video for those of us who are not operators. Grounded and sensible. Thank you
So right about not being a one man army.
I know so many people who let their ego get in the way of rational decisions, the safest thing a man can do is protect himself and his family, and that doesn’t mean being a hero .
People tend to fall back on their training rather than rise to an occasion. How many have put in the hours for their heroics.
@@sidecharacter7165 very few, even those with training haven’t had to use them (me)
Most people only “answer the call to action” as a form of pride. They don’t really have a plan, and are not equipped to deal with an emergency. (Kyle rittenhouse) and that married couple who stood on their front porch, armed with a rifle and a dinky pistol.
I don’t doubt that these people do have somewhat honest intentions, but the main thing they’re trying to do is send a message.
Not a hill I would die on.
Thanks for the compliment on the video work on Dirty Civilian! Means a lot!
So, for all the high-speed warriors who think you need all this trash, look at our adversaries: Viet Cong, Taliban, and so forth; beat the world's most significant fighting force in the world with man jammies, an AK, and sandals. Your mind is your greatest weapon; learn from your enemies, and know helmet and ceramic plates are great, but the Lord has already determined your day to meet him.
men in caves with sandals kept us on our toes for 20 years.
Defeated is a laughable statement the only reason the Vietnamese won was the south didnt want to fight. Same for Afghanistan the local power didnt want to fight. Going up against the US in armed conflict will erase a generation. Without the proper kit and skill Going up against professionals is a death sentence.
@@mikemcc1156just about the same amount of time men in jungles with sandals kept us on our toes 🤔
Yea also look at the death ratios between the two sides.
Notice that they had caves or tunnels. The helmet and plates are the replacement of those.
This is probably the most realistic video covering this subject that I've seen in a long time. Congrats to you for being upfront and honest about it.
I agree that with “preparedness” that there is a law of diminishing returns. I suppose that the vast majority of us watching your channel have come to terms with the fact that the stakes have never been higher but will also never be this low again. 2024 is going to be the ride of our existence.
I love this philosophy. The KISS principle (keep it simple stupid) is very applicable here.
Use what you have and don't overcomplicate things. The more items added to an AR build equals more variables to execute, but also more points of failure.
I'll be saving this video for reference and watching it repeatedly in the future.
Thanks Wranglestar! You're a walking book of wisdom.
@wranglerstar you are my longest subscription. I've loved your channel through every stage of its growth. This one hit home in a lot of ways and I appreciate the candor and old school reflection. Be well, brother. All the best to the family.
I've explored these same thoughts before. Like having a 10.5 PSA with a law folder that I can throw in a backpack with some L210 plates, medical, and a holster. You gave me some ideas. Great vid. Btw, I'm here bc the Dirty Civilian guys shared this video 😎
Great info Cody. I've been overseas, also I've been COTUS when I got caught in a riot (mostly peaceful) during riot in I was carrying concealed with 2 buddies who were not. We all felt a bit safe knowing that NOBODY else knew I was carrying.
It's not always about carrying a big stick, it's about having said stick and knowing when to whack someone with it.
A needle to the eye can be just as debilitating as a branch to the head.
I just want to say I love you man.
Been watching for many years now, crazy times we live in.
I remember initially following for your knowledge in homesteading and bushcraft.
Much respect
God bless you, Cody. You're a man with a lot of wisdom, and, not the least, a good heart. You'll do well in the coming crisis, I'm sure, being able to sustain your family when every other earthly support is cut off. A comforting thought is that when the door of mercy is finally closed, the faithful will be on the safe side eternity, no matter what befalls them in the remaining days of this old world.
Am i the only one who was waiting for him to come to the realization he didnt need all that on his mk18? Loved the clean simple look of your mk18 build video. Nice to see you going back to that. Good job sir
It seems that you have came to the same conclusion that many special forces operators, partisans, PMC contractors and regular soldiers that have been in real battles come to - less is more.
One thing I love about being in the rural Deep South: camo and long guns are extremely common…especially in the fall and winter when our big hunting seasons kickoff.
I love this concept. I've been working on my set up with a lot of this in mind for a while. I’ve tried to center around capability and flexibility. This is what I have settled on so far... Still a work in progress.
Carry - Glock 23, Not the best but it’s reliable and does off the ability to switch to 9mm with a simple barrel change (can’t change a 19 to “23” without changing the slide). You can switch the mags and guid rod if you really want but it’s just more to carry. Changing only the barrel is not the perfect solution but it does offer a backup option in a pinch without much additional gear/weight.
In the car - I drive an early 2000’s Honda, not know for their security. So the idea of leaving a usable firearm in my vehicle is not something I am comfortable with. Enter the Hera Arms Triarii. Anything you can put on your AR can be put on the Triarii, including buffer tubes and stocks. It’s small enough it will fit into most bags (with a folding stock) but still not a big deal if you have to leave it in your vehicle. Just drop your pistol in and you’ve got a PDW/SBR. They also offer chassis for pistols other than Glock (CZ, S&W, SIG, H&K, and Walther).
The main downsides, aside from it being and SBR and all that entails, may be price, having to remove an optic from your carry pistol to put in the chassis and as far as I know they’re not compatible with suppressors due to how the barrels move when cycling.
For hearing pro I am looking at the Walker bluetooth ear buds. EVERYONE uses ear buds now days so you can always wear them and no one will say anything. Plus because they are bluetooth they will work for more than just shooting.
Still working through my bags and rigs but right now I am using an old first gen 5.11 Rush 24, military issue tanker tool bag (perfect size for the Triarii), and a generic sling bag. Quick tip for camouflaging your bag. T-shirts. Throw a t-shirt over it, run the top of the straps through the arms down to the bottom, the grab handle through the neck and you're good to go. Terrain or weather changes, just change the shirt.
Man, I sometimes hate what you say. Sometimes, I love what you say. No matter which, though, I respect what you say. You never come off dishonest. Good on you mate..
You're absolutely correct in my humble opinion. It's easy to get wrapped up in the whole "high speed operator" stuff. In reality it's not what the majority of us are. Period. We are simply Americans who want to be prepared for anything and if we can lend a hand or protect innocent life we certainly will. That being said, running around with the kit of a top tier operator is stupid. You nailed it with this video. I agree with you 100% on this one. Well done sir
Indeed. They are "high speed," because they have gathered intel and rehearsed their plan of attack. I guarantee you if they find themselves wandering blind into unknown territory, "high speed" is the last thing they'll be doing. "Move fast, shoot straight," is great if you know where you're going. Not so great if you have zero intel.
Wow nailed it your speaking to probably 90% of the world that opening comment was spot on!!
@wranglerstar easily one of the best channels on youtube. Leveling up daily.
About leaving stuff in your vehicle, some cars are like blinking signs for break in or carjacking. Gray man should have a gray car.
I once knew an old guy who’s car seat was torn and split. That’s where he kept his pistol.
3rd gen acura TL's are a little fancy looking, but rear seats are bolted in and there's a killswitch in the glovebox for the trunk latch. The hatch in the seat has a lock too so you can't pull the emergency open cord. This is definitely an exception though and it's way better to be grey.
@@Greatwhitesloth I was also thinking, looking into a car you don’t see the headliner. Velcro and/or magnet to hold stuff to the inside of the cars roof might be a good idea?
@@sixoffive It's so crazy it just might work.
I love this bringing people back to basics and realistic. From my time in the infantry this is so true start with basics and as the mission creeps into larger demands, gear up from thier.
Square knot: under over; over under - from the left.
Serrated blades are incredibly useful,no idea why one would deter another from having one.
I wandered away a few years ago and am now just re-engaging with this channel. This content is more to my way of thinking. When the shtf and I’m in an urban environment, I want to blend and not have high end gear that could spot light me. This video helps me think differently. Thank you
Oh god one less viewer oooof you power player you
@@TheAlphaLegio try that again- I totally screwed up my line of thinking
If you have an extra 40-50k.... Go ahead & larp... but if you're not fit and highly trained... it will just be a lead weight on your ankles when you think it's the shiznit...= get you killed. Main thing is to have the capability to make holes, plug holes, sustain a set duration of engagement behind cover / concealment.
Consider a poncho as an alternative to the vest. It will hide the plate carrier and can be donned much faster. Ponchos also can be made into a quick emergency shelter. I would also recommend considering a chest rig or placard system as they allow you to easily scale your gear depending on the situation.
Underrated comment...browsing ponchos
Why would you wear a plate carrier unless you are active military deployed or perhaps LEO on the job?
@@JK-vc7ie if you have to ask this is the wrong channel for you to watch.
@@christianwilson5956 Like he said, that is larping behavior. You have never been shot at. You never will be shot at.
@@JK-vc7ie he literally talks about wearing a plate carrier under a vest
Just for the sheer fact that you say things like " that's something I don't know anything about" among other things, you have my sub. I think your honesty is a very good eye opener for a lot of us here. Honesty starts with the self, I'm excited to see more of your content.
My favorite LARPer-ism is only carrying 4 mags because their favorite SOF dude does, not realizing the SOF kit is set up for a sub 24hr mission, he's got at least 11 other dudes with him, and they have belt feds and grenade launchers. Infantry in Ukraine right now have moved from 7 mags to 12 for their standard combat load because 7 was hardly getting them through a single mission, let alone follow on tasks. Civilians don't have QRF or a logistics train following them, pack accordingly.
The best way of looking at things is the Vietnam war era conflict and how they packed their kit it’s the most practical and realistic way of doing things
Really good video.
It might not be what people want to hear, but it's what they need to hear.
I have been thinking a lot along the same lines. I live literally on the other side of the country from you so I’ve had to think about different weather situations but I’ve started changing up my EDC more for convenience and just getting home. My state is alot less authoritarian than yours so I have a strong stand you ground laws that help me be more flexible about my identity in bad situations but still the same the goal is to make it home with my family safe. One of your best videos to date.
Hey beloved! I just wanted to say that I love you and your humor, and especially love your content. I'm just a regular guy in a fairly new marriage with a child on the way and your content has provided so much wisdom for me to glean from. I want to say thank you from the bottom of my heart for the work you do to reach such a forgotten audience of young men. I can tell you're a man of God, and I pray you're blessed in everything you do. Thanks, brother.
I feel like we are all thinking the same thing lately and all in sync with how things are going 😊
Same
Enjoying Fall and keeping cozy? You betcha 👍🏻
i learned the hard way of setting up a kit in country. A lot of trial and error. Started looking like a Call of Duty operator and ending up cutting it down and taking what is needed.
Thanks for this humbling vid. Keep doing what you do.
A simple lesson learned early on at Benning... Ounces equal pounds-pounds equal pain.
All the cool stuff is awesome, but it is also more weight that most of us aren't prepared for.
Great video as always
We packed ifaks with nuttinfancey
Learned tractor drivebys with Hickok45
Made our mosins rock with iv8888
And we shitposted with Garandthumb
Now, we prepare for the fall with papa wranglerstar
Greetings from Austria 🇦🇹 😀
The Best aspect of your channel is your authenticity.
God bless..
They also make an AR attachment that catches your brass. Could be handy in certain situations.
Or cause it to jam
@@williamgoderwis8995 Possibly
P365, 1 extra mag, crossbreed Holster, and a Benchmade griptillion. That’s all I need.
Nice video. I have gone through this transformation recently as well. I also went to a nondescript duffle and downsized a little. I went with a lightweight 16” AR with a 1-6 because of my local area. Instead of a low pro plate carrier, I opted for a minimalist chest rig that I can wear under a pack comfortably (your slick back plate carrier wouldn’t be too bad). Again, great vid.
Very good way to go about it. I love gear and have worn it for work most my life by we all have to realize we aren't going to be able to carry it all.
Yes. You are correct in every regard.
1. Get a chest rig. Chest rigs fit over a coat and different layers. And they are less expensive then the whole plate carrier.
2. Run your carrier slick.
3. Use a backpack as your plate carrier.
4. Hold your gear in a big bag like what you have. Pilot kit bags are perfect for this.
5. I would think a short shotgun would be better for the role than a AR pistol. But either will work.
The whole point is to be able to stash or take gear off with ease. This kind of stuff is more suited for us, since we are looked at as bad actors.
I agree with everything you said except the shotgun part.
The chest rig/slick plate carrier combo is great, as long as you choose the right combo. Chest rigs with H-harness work better than the X harness. That’s just my experience. I love the ability to dress down without having to take my plate carrier off, thats a big plus in a combat zone. And I like having the option to go without armor and have something more breathable in the summer months.
Someone who’s not trying to sell us new stuff with affiliate links? How refreshing.
I would consider adding some buffer under the plates. Bare plates are good at stopping smaller caliber, fragments and buckshot. But when a bigger projectile hits, even without penetration, it may break your ribs and even make your heart stop. I believe they are standard issue in every army and most see them as means of ventilation, those 2-3 centimeters can make a big difference.
@@JackClemens-fx2ixIf you do not expect to take rounds, why are you wearing body armor?
@@scottgrandy531 Tbf, I'd rather trade plates for a better rig setup with ammunition and sustainment from a purely civilian standpoint. Ideally you avoid confrontation as much as possible in an environment where gunfights might occur to begin with, and the likelihood that someone lands solid, body mass shots and doesn't happen to clip an arm or your lower abdomen is low. Plates only really prevent a lot of fragmentation in most use cases and if someone is peppering you with rifle rounds you're not surviving regardless of your plates.
100% agree, but for the guys that aren’t fit, as Garand Thumb said: get fit or you’re going to die
Great thoughts. You always have a different perspective than whatever people are currently saying and take into account “common man” considerations. I’ve learned a lot watching you. Much appreciated.
The 2A operator needs to look like a regular person
Great video. As someone who is shopping, opened my eyes a lot. Thank you. Now I can go in smart and not waste money and time on the spec ops gear...not a spec ops guy.
Another thing to think about:
Camo is cool, for sure, but do you want to look like the government boys if things get bad?
Probably not.
My friend says it pretty well; don't become a loot drop for someone else.
Genuine and sincere... some of the best qualities of this amazing man ♾️💚
Guy got mad that Rolling Stone called him a prepper as he shows a brand new prepper video.
Would definitely like to dive into the footwear and "uniform" side of Proho
❤ thank you for your incite, and everything you do on this platform. Some of my ki set ups inspirations are from you and my dad. If you want to hide plates, use a 2x large hoodie or heavy hoodie.
Love the practical argument! Always a great ongoing continuous discussion. We have to grow and adapt. Thank you for the living and breathing flow of reality and thought.
This makes the most sense of everything I've watch on UA-cam. I've had the same thoughts.
Your approach is very practical and certainly mature. I can't help but equating this with the Minutemen of the American Revolution. They were not the professionally trained and equipped Continental Army. They employed what they had at hand and on stand-by at a moment's notice to repel the British. This coming from a Canadian whose own militia stood ready to augment the sparse British regulars to repel larger American armies that invaded our territory. Hey, we won too! One can never underestimate the role and value of the militia. Amen.
GG
Yes but militia are backed up by intelligence and most the time are in preparation for a certain mission but for the common civilian it’s not beneficial
Dude, the common civilian is supposed to be the militia. At least in the States we are supposed to be decentralized fighters capable if irregular warfare without a unified command structure. What you are talking about is a defense force or an army.@@ifreezetvcomics
@@ifreezetvcomics What are you even talking about?
A militia IS the common civilian. If your "militia" is reporting to a government agency, surprise surprise, you aren't a militia, you are just government pawns they get to use as a scapegoat should things go sideways.
Can you give me an example where a militia overthrow their government
without the help of another country providing weapons or having political/ military alliance within their own government?
Long-form content is 👑
FINALLY SOMEONE WHO TALKS ABOUT IMPORTANT THINGS LIKE THIS!!! Thank you for bringing up this important topic, I'm so tired of people thinking that they are going to be the cool SOF guys and not just sitting in a trench hiding from artillery...
Cody!! This video has been needed for a long time! Thank you for this, recovering from the same head cold here and was fiddling with key gear over the weekend. Thank you brother, your LS are missed!!
Medical was extremely under emphasized but good tips here
Honestly, concealable soft armor might be the way to go. Something that could take plates if you want them. Just run a chest rig over it if you need the kitchen sink
Only if you live in Iraq
Gotta love this guy! Rock on man. Have a blessed one bruh you are appreciated! 👊
Thank-you for a common sense approach to self defense and everyday living in a crazy world in which we live in today.
I live in a medium town in SE Georgia. I went to a protest during the Summer of Love. I concealed full size plates front and back in a carrier and a pistol with extra mags on a belt that I wore just beneath my plates (as opposed to at my hips) all under a leather jacket. Unfortunately it was a little warm for the jacket so I looked a little off. I know the cops made me because my inlaws were glued to the police scanner, but no one else paid any attention to me, and the cops didn't do anything more than keep an eye on me.
K.I.S.S. Don't try to carry all the gadgets and gear to cover every situation when statistically, being in a situation that requires all that stuff is very highly unlikely. Be prepared for what is most likely to happen, which is thugs trying to rob or carjack you, not some complete societal breakdown. If you get caught up in a riot, you haven't been paying attention to what's going on, there are warning signs before things like that happen. If there's a high profile racial court case anywhere in the country whose verdict is due at any time, don't go into the city. If there's some political rally or some kind of controversial political decision taking place, don't go into the city. If there's a championship game on, especially if it's the home team of your nearest big city, don't be in town when it ends. If the race baiters are calling for protests for whatever reason, don't go into the city. Just plain don't be in the city after dark because that's when most riots and crimes seem to happen.
I almost bought a full on high speed plate carrier and the whole nine yards the other day and after I thought about it I decided not to. I need a manual well pump in case of emergency a lot more. I think Clint Smith once said that armor is only good if the guy shooting at you can hit the plate
Yup, medical supplies and tools are necessary.
Columbia windbreakers are another good way to cover your gear but also look casual.
Instead of continuously stripping down and building back up your carrier you should have two. One slick like the lv119 or the trexarms Ac1 that can be worn under a rain jacket easily without it being obvious and still have couple rifle mags, ifak, radio etc..
and another carrier thats built to carry more weight like a JPC 2.0 with your more ‘’deployment/ combat’’ type gear that cant be worn low vis but that offers significantly more capabilities. Have both built for their specific desired uses and have both ready to go. A lot better than stripping/adding stuff to the same carrier. Thats a plan to forget something important and not have it the day you would of needed it. Mags and ifaks should be had in double or triple and be dedicated to a specific setup so wtv. You decide to grab and go on that day your sure tou have everything that’s been added to that specific kit.
that mk18 with a super scuffed buffer tube and a definitive line where the scuffs stop.
my man gets it.
I'm a newb who was near 100% firearms ignorant until 53 years of age when I woke up to the NWO & built my first AR. I've learned aLOT of things since then. NONE of those things make me any sort of soldier much less a tactically trained agent. At 122lbs I'm also not the guy you send to kick a door down for a breach & clear. I see alot of cool gear I'd love to get to know but it's not about being "cool". It's about being an effective civilian agent in defense of freedom and when luxury affords, survival. I DO hope I get some good exposure to skull mounted night optics at some point. $2,500-$3,500 for quality functional night optics is not an unreasonable price in my opinion. How sad I've had to learn more about my government and the Constitution at a well staffed firearms dealer than I did in school. Shame on our State Run Indoctrication system and Shame on us for letting this happen.
I am in your same boat good sir, I’m 42 and rushing to get prepared. I have had my LTC for 2 yrs now, I am proficient and comfortable with my Glock and carry spare mags at all times. Have yet to shoot or train with my carbine, but just paid for defensive carbine training in December. I do regret not joining the military in my 20’s to serve my country, get good training and practice in. Stay strong and god bless 🇺🇸
Mental illness is the no. 1 reason why people feel the need to arm themselves as paramilitaries in peacetime. Might be better addressing the issues that cause you to feel the need to play soldiers decades after you got your last GI Joe toy.
Instant classic of a video. One of your best. Great insight on no-nonsense practicality
The older I get the more I realize it's, run, hide, fight.