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Jeff Cooper Legacy Foundation

An armed man is a citizen; unarmed, he is merely a subject

Ballistic Wampum

Ballistic Wampum

November 6, 2024 Lindy Comments 0 Comment
Ballistic Wampum
by Jeff Cooper (Excerpt from ‘Fireworks’ by Jeff Cooper 1981)
Economic sophisticates are no strangers to the notion that money, which all would like to think of as a conceptual reality, is actually an abstraction. Even, perhaps especially, the learned sages who convene now and again to consider and debate this arcane subject cannot satisfactorily define money. At a recent conference one member, in desperation, declaimed, “If the dog eats it, it’s dog food!” Thus, if you can buy stuff with it, it’s money. O.K. But this leaves us totally dependent upon the whim of the seller, does it not? He will accept what you offer him as money only as long as he has reason to believe that other people will accept it at the same value when he offers it to them—unless he can put whatever it is to his own personal use. The latter option is barter—chickens for legal advice, manual labor for food, et cetera.
As long as money is minted gold or silver, even though we cannot eat it, we have something other than good faith on which to base our prospects. Gold, particularly, is dependable in value under almost all conditions. A trustworthy entity (king, nation, company, bank) which promises to redeem its paper in gold, on demand, can issue pretty good money. Obviously when an untrustworthy entity does not so promise, what it issues as “money” has no value at all apart from a sort of social momentum.
As long as the United States held to the gold standard, and before expediency was placed above truth by Roosevelt II, U.S. paper money was a great thing to own— and spend. Now look at it. Would that more people would stop whimpering “Prices are going up,” when what they mean is “The dollar is going down!” Why shouldn’t it? It has no value other than what the fiscal libertines of the left say it has, and they have a license to print it without promising to redeem it for anything—not even peanuts. (I try to keep my sanity by thinking of dollars as dimes—earned, spent, or taxed. Whether that expedient has worked is moot.)
For the moment we try to get along by working feverishly for the dwindling paper dollar, because we have no choice. We don’t know what the future holds, but we do know that we had better turn our cash into things while we still can. As matters are progressing now, that green stuff is heading toward the time when it will be useful mainly for starting fires.
(Fritz Hayek, one of the few significant modern economists, has now reached the conclusion that the only hope remaining is the termination of the government money monopoly and the institution of private minting. A stimulating theory, but don’t hold your breath.)
All the foregoing is common knowledge, and those few who are both wise and fortunate—or wise and able—have been doing what they could to strengthen their economic dikes. However, as I scan what might be called “The Doomsday Press” I note that one obvious commodity is conspicuously lacking from the lists of what the wise should stock against disaster. This is ammunition. I do not mean ammunition as fodder for defensive and alimentary purposes, but ammunition as economic tender. In times of monetary collapse, ammunition (in a free, or recently free, country) is not only more valuable than any piece of paper, it is even more valuable than minted coin— because you can use it. You can’t drink paper, and you can’t eat gold (as the Araucanians forcibly demonstrated to the conquistador), but ammunition you can shoot, and by shooting you can both stock your larder and keep the ill-disposed off your back, Additionally and importantly, ammunition is nearly negotiable, being compact, accurately divisible, almost non-degenerative, and not as specialized as one might at first assume. One round of 22 long rifles is now worth about 31/2¢. The moment you can’t find it on the store shelf it is worth a nickel. After it has been unobtainable for three months it will get you a cup of ersatz coffee. And the minute The Revolutionary Committee for Public Order takes over and bans it, it will buy you a good breakfast.
Now, therefore, whenever I buy ammunition I buy two portions-“one for me and one for my friend,” My friend, in this case, is a storage locker—tough, portable, and containing, in addition to its primary load, a package of “silica gel” or calcium carbonate as a dehumidifier.
Clearly the 22 long rifle is the big item. Everybody has a 22. The high-speed hollow-point is the best variety—it sounds better in a deal. I don’t think you can have too much, but don’t run out and buy a vast quantity. Big Brother is watching you.
For pistols, stock 38 Special, 357, and 45 ACP. Some Parabellum if you live in the East. And a couple of boxes of 380 and 32 ACP. These last may be essentially worthless but there are a good many pieces around to take them. In the West we want a bit of 45 Colt and 44 Magnum as well.
For rifles, the basic caliber is 308, closely followed by 30-06, 270, and 30-30. While 223 is increasingly popular with serious shooting types, such people probably have an adequate supply on hand and will not be beating the bushes in your direction. We have such a plethora of rifle calibers that no one could possibly stock them all, but you might look in on your local friendly gunstore (small type) and see what is on the shelf. He caters to the one-box-a-year man, and if that man owns an old 30-40 or 348 Winchester he will be hurting when the shelf goes bare.
For shotguns 12 and 20 will do, better standard length than magnum, loaded with number six birdshot. A few 410’s may not be wasted. Here again you may have reason to stock specialties if you deduce the demand.
When (as we devoutly hope it won’t) push comes to shove, you can start pistol rounds at 50¢ each (as of 10 February 1978) and rifle at $1,00. If history is any guide, when that time comes everything will immediately be declared illegal. Everything, from gasoline engines to criticizing ‘The Committee’. Guns of any kind, of course. But The Committee, or whatever it calls itself, will be even more illegal in the eyes of us moss-backs, and we will either come to some sort of modus vivendi or we will not. If we don’t survive, we will have no worries about money, or anything else. If we do, our ammunition stocks will be our staff of life.

 

OUR LATEST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS 11/1/2024

OUR LATEST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS 11/1/2024

November 5, 2024 Lindy Comments 0 Comment

Lindy and the two latest scholarship recipients at The Sconce

Kenneth Reinstadler  (left) & Matthew Christianson (right)

OUR LATEST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS 10/8/2024

OUR LATEST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS 10/8/2024

October 8, 2024 Lindy Comments 0 Comment

 

OUR LATEST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS 9/6/2024

Nine scholarship recipients on the patio at The Sconce

Kneeling: Emily LaFavre, Shawn Stewart, Jackie Miller

Standing (Left to right): Kyle Butcher, Robert Bell, Doug Lehring, Andrew Baldwin, Robert Switzer & Allan Panka

October 4, 2024

OUR LATEST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS 9/6/2024

OUR LATEST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS 9/6/2024

September 21, 2024 Lindy Comments 0 Comment

9/6/2024 SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENTS

Lindy and the three latest scholarship recipients on the patio at The Sconce

Jake Brinkley, Lindy, James Coulter, & Terry Munter

Friday, September 6, 2024

OUR LATEST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT

OUR LATEST SCHOLARSHIP RECIPIENT

July 21, 2024 Lindy Comments 0 Comment

Our latest scholarship recipient (Youth Class)

Summer Smith at the Sconce with Lindy.  July 12, 2024

Growing up Cooper

Growing up Cooper

July 8, 2024 Lindy

Growing Up Cooper

by Lindy Cooper Wisdom
May 2024
My father, Jeff Cooper, was many things.  He was a scholar, warrior, author, adventurer, teacher, lifelong student and a  connoisseur of excellence in all things.  He was also the father of the Modern Technique of the Pistol, a founder of IPSC, and the founding father of Gunsite, which is perhaps the foremost firearms training academy in the world.
I am the youngest of Jeff and Janelle’s three daughters and spent most of my formative years in Big Bear Lake, California.  I was a girl when Dad formed the Bear Valley Gunslingers and the Southwest Combat Pistol League.  I knew all the masters (Thell Reed, Elden Carl, Ray Chapman, Jack Weaver, John Plahn) as well as Bruce Nelson and John Bianchi and Al Nichols and Hugh Carpenter and many, many more who came up to Big Bear to participate in what was a form of practical university for learning what worked in the realm of defensive pistolcraft.
I took both my father’s pistol class and his rifle class and I was privileged to travel quite a bit with both my parents when the opportunities arose.  I was lucky to share my first hunt with my parents in Montana, and later hunted in Africa with them several times.  I went to many SHOT shows and NRA conventions with them as well.
Over the years, I have often been asked about my parents and my upbringing and the basic question is always, “What was it like to have Jeff Cooper as your father?”   So, let me share some memories with you.
1.  What was Jeff Cooper like as a father?
     Well, since I knew no other, I thought he was like everyone else’s father for most of my formative years.  I thought he was wonderful.  He knew the answer to every question I ever asked.  On the rare occasions when he did not, he would direct me to our set of Compton’s Encyclopedia, or to some reference book in his extensive library, and the answer would be there.
     He was fun.  He took us hiking and shooting and on road trips.  He was full of outdoor lore.  He had a sense of the dramatic.  As a family, we would get up in the dark and hike to Castle Rock to watch the sunrise while Dad read to us from the Bible about the resurrection.  Even though he had three daughters and was old-fashioned in his opinions of the different roles of ladies and gentlemen, he made sure we knew how to change a tire.
2.  Was he strict?
     I suppose he was in that what he and Mom said was law.   I did not rebel.  I never felt the inclination to rebel.  He always had good reasons for his decisions about what we could and could not do, but if it came down to “Because I said so!”, there was no argument.
3.  Was it intimidating for boys to ask you out on a date?
     I suppose it was to a degree, but I don’t think Dad was perceived as a tyrant or a threat.  He was a serious man and he was a rather large and imposing figure and he was visibly present in our lives and obviously in charge.  But teenaged boys are not particularly intuitive or aware of others as a rule, so I do not remember hearing of any boy who failed to ask any of us out because of being intimidated by my father.
4.  Did you ever get in serious trouble with your father?
     Yes.  The most serious discipline I ever received from him was for talking back to my mother.  Punishment was swift and sure and I never did it again.
5.  Did your father insist that his daughters learn to shoot?
     Only in a very informal way.  He thought it was a useful skill and he took us out plinking at cans with a .22, but he never pushed us into anything.  My sister Parry was a very good rifle shot when we were in high school, but I never fired a shot through a rifle in those days.  I think she showed an interest and he welcomed and encouraged that.
     In the first years at Gunsite, I took the introductory pistol class because I was working as the student coordinator and thought I should know what I was talking about.  I did not take Dad’s rifle class until I was 44 years old because I had been on a hunting trip with him to Africa and caught the bug.  He was proud of each of us when we shot well, but he did not pressure us.
6.  What is the most important lesson you learned from your father?
     So many come to mind that it is difficult to single one out, but I would say that his advice on living a worthy life stand out.  He said the goals of a everyone should be thus:
          a)  to understand the problem.
          b)  to pull your weight.
          c)   to appreciate.
     Understanding the problem entails using your brain and the knowledge you gain as you live your life to figure out what is good and what is not and work toward solutions for perpetuating what is good.  Pulling your weight is an admonition to be part of the solution.  Appreciating all the good that exists to your fullest capacity enriches your life.
     My parents were raised with Christian ethics and the moral traditions of Western civilization and they inculcated within us the same.  They believed in the sanctity of the family and the importance of raising good citizens.  To this end, the dinner table was sacrosanct.  We ate together at almost every meal.  Good manners were taught and insisted upon.  There was only one conversation at a time and everyone listened, even if it was the youngest one at the table who had the floor.  Events and ideas were analyzed and judged and commented upon.  It is no wonder that my sisters and I share common beliefs to this day about right and wrong, good and evil, what it to be done and what is not be done.
     When I left for college, my father told me that he and Mom had done all they could to teach me what they thought I should know.  He said I would never again live under the same roof with them in the same way I had.   He told me that they had complete faith in me and my judgement.  And, he told me that they had my back no matter what I did from then on.
     That was a formidable speech for me to hear at age 18.  It took me aback.  It made me realize that I needed to step up, grow up and “do the right thing”.  It was intimidating.   It was frightening and freeing at the same time.   It was empowering.  It asked of me just a bit more than I thought I was capable of doing.  That was my Dad.
Note:  To perpetuate my Dad’s teachings, the Cooper family formed The Jeff Cooper Legacy Foundation, a 501 c (3).
Please visit our website at https://www.jeffcooperfoundation.org to see what we are all about.
Part 2 of “Growing up Cooper”
Our Latest Scholarship Recipients

Our Latest Scholarship Recipients

June 17, 2024 Lindy

June 14, 2024

Brian Picard and Peter Lopez at the Sconce on June 14, 2024.  Congratulations to our two most recent scholarship recipients.

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If you were fortunate enough to meet Janelle Cooper, you will know that this statement about her from The Guru, is true: “Jane Ellen Marks Cooper, my bride of 60 years.  I have lightly termed her “The Countess”, as that is the only title I may apply to the consort of a “Guru”. The Countess is the only person I have ever encountered, either in person or by reputation, who is without flaw.  Life has handed her its full share of tribulation, fulfillment, and adventure, and she has met each successive year with unmatched wisdom, courage, and pleasure – in equal measure.  The Countess is one of God’s best handworks.  I must have led a truly exemplary life in my previous incarnation if I deserve her in this one”
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If you were fortunate enough to meet Janelle Cooper, you will know that this statement about her from The Guru, is true: “Jane Ellen Marks Cooper, my bride of 60 years. I have lightly termed her “The Countess”, as that is the only title I may apply to the consort of a “Guru”. The Countess is the only person I have ever encountered, either in person or by reputation, who is without flaw. Life has handed her its full share of tribulation, fulfillment, and adventure, and she has met each successive year with unmatched wisdom, courage, and pleasure – in equal measure. The Countess is one of God’s best handworks. I must have led a truly exemplary life in my previous incarnation if I deserve her in this one”
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Where have you seen this before?  The Reactionary Manifesto! #thesconce ? Visit our website for more great quotes from The Guru!  Jeffcooperfoundation.org
Where have you seen this before?  The Reactionary Manifesto! #thesconce ? Visit our website for more great quotes from The Guru!  Jeffcooperfoundation.org
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Where have you seen this before? The Reactionary Manifesto! #thesconce ? Visit our website for more great quotes from The Guru! Jeffcooperfoundation.org
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Jeff and Janelle enjoying the outdoors!
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Jeff and Janelle enjoying the outdoors!
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August 1968. #Ruger #22longriflepistol
August 1968. #Ruger #22longriflepistol
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August 1968. #Ruger #22longriflepistol
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Shooting the M-16 “Poodle Shooter”. 1967, Big Bear.
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Shooting the M-16 “Poodle Shooter”. 1967, Big Bear.
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Our latest scholarship recipients at #Gunsite. Gary Cordes, Matthew Peake, Lindy, Halen Mertens. 4-17-26
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Our latest scholarship recipients at #Gunsite. Gary Cordes, Matthew Peake, Lindy, Halen Mertens. 4-17-26
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The Colonel having a little fun with the Striker! What’s not to love about a #12gauge #revolver ?
The Colonel having a little fun with the Striker! What’s not to love about a #12gauge #revolver ?
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The Colonel having a little fun with the Striker! What’s not to love about a #12gauge #revolver ?
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Jump on over to our website to read this great article from Leatherneck Magazine. Jeffcooperfoundation.org
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Jump on over to our website to read this great article from Leatherneck Magazine. Jeffcooperfoundation.org
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Jeff Cooper shooting his #3040krag
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Jeff Cooper shooting his #3040krag
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Our purpose is to promote and perpetuate the teachings and philosophy of Jeff Cooper, with special emphasis on the proper techniques for the use of small arms, the importance of self-reliance and the individual right and duty of self-defense.

The Foundation awards scholarships for training and education in the Cooper tradition.   In addition, it preserves, archives and maintains  Colonel Cooper’s writings and personal collections so that they may provide study and learning opportunities and inspiration for generations to come.

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Staff car - a Riley, made in Britain.
Staff car - a Riley, made in Britain.
Floy as her grandchildren knew her.
Floy as her grandchildren knew her.
Jeff shoots pseudo-scout.
Jeff shoots pseudo-scout.
Jeff's friend, Dan Gurney
Jeff's friend, Dan Gurney
A natural-born teacher.
A natural-born teacher.
Impala taken with pistol
Impala taken with pistol

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Jeff Cooper

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