Wrong- I have a mastiff and his food alone costs more in a year than the guns I own. Then there’s vet bills, anti heart worm meds, training costs and the time investment to spend time with the dog (although it worth it). I agree though, for home protection and prevention his bark is worth more than 100 guns. But I can’t take him to the store. My two biggest concerns are late night home invasion (which the dog being out helps greatly with) and getting jacked when I’m out and about, so I now have the pistol.
Not historically, but, 20% unemployment hasn't been historical either. People get desperate, criminals get emboldened during chaos (see NOLA during Katrina). Better safe than sorry.
Home defense: Remington 870 express magnum or Mossberg 590a1. If you want a handgun, a Glock 19x or Smith and Wesson R8 (ttr8) .357 large frame revolver. Any of these options are “for life” guns. Stick with these for home defense. Don’t worry about “jamming” or magazine wearing out for Glocks.
I’ve been playing Call of duty warzone.. and I must say. I want a ak47 and a rocket launcher as my secondary. Never know when you need to shoot down a plane
I'm not a gun expert but I was led to believe revolvers were less likely to jam (not impossible, granted). I think the ease of use is another factor. Not that a pistol is hard to learn, but I found pointing and shooting a revolver simpler than sliding back a semi-auto to chamber a round first
With ranges not open and I'm assuming you haven't been to one(if i'm wrong then my apologies), go to an actual store to buy one. Ask them to show you all that is needed to use it and safety precautions. IMO its hard to buy a gun you'll like without having shot it before. But if you really need/want one go to a store.
Nevermind if the situation should occur, there are a hundred different ways the situation can go more wrong wielding a gun than not having one at all. I dont get the TP hoarding, but its much more logical than buying a gun for self defense when a person has no idea how to use a weapon in a high stressed situation. Its much more complicated than pulling it from your waist band and pointing it at the intruder and killing him. Forgot to put a bullet in a chamber? you and your family are dead. Forgot to take the safety off? You and your family are dead. Didn't seat the mag all the way. you and your family are dead. Your child comes running around the corner and you're not trained to identify and process the situation, your child is dead. At least with a 5 year supply of TP, you can use it over the next 5 years. Maybe it could be a fire hazard?
for home defense id start with a shotgun. easy to load, shoot, maintain and clean. also, its probably the only type of ammo you can reliably get right now. i went to cabellas a couple weeks ago and they had no 9mm ammo. and as far as shotgun shells, they had no buckshot or slugs. just birdshot. but honestly, i think birdshot is fine for home defense. getting blasted in the chest or face from 10'-20' feet with #8 is more than likely going to kill. and if you are firing buckshot in your house you risk it going through two or three walls and potentially hitting someone else in the house or even going through your neighbors wall. also, buying a gun right now is going to be slim pickins. you should be able to find a good 12 gauge somewhere though. short barrel (18.5''-20'') is preferable for home defense, but really anything will do the trick.
I have several of both .... a S&W 38sp that was my grandfathers service revolver - he was a cop post WWII until he left for Korea , a Taurus 50 , a Colt 22 Frontier Scout and multiple semi auto's - most notably a Colt .45 1911 gold cup. I'm confident in either or getting the job done and never had one jam but the ease of shooting a single action revolver .... its point and shoot. My mother is in her 70's and is a small woman , she carries a Colt Mustang Lite .380 - Its so small I can literally hide it in my hand , It weighs something like 11 oz. Its perfect for people of small stature.
From what I have read, it's easy to get a 'service dog' certification. It's one of the pitfalls I was warned about when I started buying rent houses, a way for people to circumvent pet restrictions.
Listen to this advice right here. May I add that just because you like the build/look of a gun, it may turn out to not be right for you. The ergonomics, how it fires, accuracy, etc. Go with a 9mm. And practice, practice, practice.
PKM with extended mag would be SWEEET. On the dogs vs guns debate. You need a gun to protect your dog. Cops shoot dogs. They'll jump a fence for whatever reason, or enter a home, a dog will charge, and they shoot. Cop shoots my dog I'm shooting back. I don't own a gun. But I'm all for the right to.
Nope, just a revenue stream. I put maybe 10 minutes a month in to it, unless there's a vacancy then it's about 5 hours. So far, holding steady.