The world's largest army...

Corey

OverCamping Specialist
Just got this in my email from a friend.
The world's largest army... America's hunters! I had never thought about this....

A blogger added up the deer license sales in just a handful of states and arrived at a striking conclusion:

There were over 600,000 hunters this season in the state of Wisconsin.

Allow me to restate that number.

Over the last several months, Wisconsin's hunters became the eighth largest army in the world.

More men under arms than in Iran.

More than in France and Germany combined.

These men deployed to the woods of a single American state to hunt with firearms, and no one was killed.

That number pales in comparison to the 750,000 who hunted the woods of Pennsylvania and Michigan's 700,000 hunters, all of whom have now returned home.

Toss in a quarter million hunters in West Virginia and it literally establishes the fact that

the hunters of those four states alone would comprise the largest army in the world.

The point?

America will forever be safe from foreign invasion with that kind of home-grown firepower.


Hunting -- it's not just a way to fill the freezer. It's a matter of national security.

*************************************************

That's why all enemies, foreign and domestic, want to see us disarmed.

Food for thought when next we consider gun control. When the government takes away our guns, our freedom is gone. Think about it.
 

cwsqbm

Explorer
That's not an army, that's a lot of people with guns. There are plenty of crappy countries in the world were it seems everyone has an AK-47 or worse - as our military is currently experiencing firsthand.
 

yubert

Explorer
And that's an army that is hunting prey that doesn't shoot back. Furthermore, how effective will this "army" be in a nuclear or biological war?
 

Mr. Leary

Glamping Excursionaire
:sombrero:

Ok guys. Lets all go watch Red Dawn and clean our rifles.

Its a nice thought though... sounds like its straight from the NRA...
 

shortbus4x4

Expedition Leader
Actually I believe Admiral Yamamoto of WWII fame came to the conclusion (long before any bloggers did) that any Japanese invasion of the US mainland would be facing serious resistance from the civilian population who was well armed with hunting rifles. I think he said "there would be a rifle behind every blade of grass."
 

alfio

Adventurer
a bunch of overweight guys with rifles does not an army make. i don't have any problems with people owning guns but the idea that hunters could even begin to mount a check against any organized military force is about as funny as the above mentioned 'red dawn.'
 

jeeper92

Adventurer
Alfo

Are you kidding???? Id be quite confident that the people of this country would be able to wage a guerilla warfare better thenehn any of the third world countries in the world. Christ, half the people in this forum are better armed the afghan rebels and insurgents in iraq that give our soldiers problems everyday
 

dwh

Tail-End Charlie
A) "Quantity has a quality all its own."

The point is, that the hunters in just 4 American states outnumber any organized army in the world. Now add in the fact that there are also a lot of gun owners who don't have hunting licenses, and the fact that there are an additional 46 states which weren't even counted. That's a LOT of shooters.

Sure, they're not up to the training standards of a regular army, but with oh... say 30-1 odds (or more) in their favor, they stand a pretty good chance in a conventional war. Even if they are fat. Or at least fat when the war starts - they wouldn't stay fat for long. And then there is the home field advantage as well. Plus a whole bunch of them ARE military trained, and they'd be training those who aren't.


B) A rifle is a pretty good "gun to get a gun".

Shoot a guy who's got an AK, and now you've got a rifle AND an AK. Shoot a guy who's got a SAW, and now you've got a rifle, an AK and a SAW. Couple more guys with rifles and you've got a rifle squad. EDIT: And let's not forget, there's a whole bunch of National Guard Armories, which is a pretty good stockpile of military grade weapons.


Of course, all of that is unnecessary - all we really have to do is unleash Ted Nugent and then just sit back and count the bodies.
 
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Soobarubin

Observer
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Resistance
And most of them were farmers, probably never even handled a firearm in their lives.
I wouldn't doubt for a minute, that in my area for sure, the hunters with guns, would be willing to militia and do what needs to be done in a heartbeat.
I'm proud to be part of the worlds largest civilian army.

-Jaren
 

Mr. Leary

Glamping Excursionaire
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Resistance
And most of them were farmers, probably never even handled a firearm in their lives.
I wouldn't doubt for a minute, that in my area for sure, the hunters with guns, would be willing to militia and do what needs to be done in a heartbeat.
I'm proud to be part of the worlds largest civilian army.

-Jaren

The numerical advantage is much less meaningful when there is no chain of command and no direction. The military operates successfully because the mission is clear and officers are given just enough autonomy to bend the rules in order to complete the mission.

A hunters rebellion would be effective as a harrassment force, but lacks the organizational ability to mount an effective defense against an army of the caliber of the US. Not a chance, but there would be lots of blood on both sides...
 

dwh

Tail-End Charlie
The numerical advantage is much less meaningful when there is no chain of command and no direction.

That statement is based on the assumption that American civilians are utterly incapable of establishing a chain of command or clearly defined objective.

I, for one, do not believe that assumption is at all accurate. And again, don't forget that there are a whole of lot of ex-military civilians in the U.S. Trained by the U.S. military itself. There's gotta be at least a couple who know how to organize a fighting force.

There may be no chain of command and no direction -at the moment-, but that would not be the situation for long if it came to defending the homeland.
 

overlander

Expedition Leader
US defenses are designed by echelonment:

lines of defense:
  1. regular army units forward deployed on foreign soil
  2. US based regular army units
  3. national guard and reserve units
  4. national draft trainees for replacements and standup augmentation units
  5. militia units as descriped by OP organized under regular army and reserve command elements/officers (much like the revolutionaray war)

Russia was able to turn the tide on the Nazi offensive through vast numbers, rudamentary equipment and unity of command.

When I was in Iraq, the Iraq federal law stated every household was allowed to have 1 AK47 for personal defense. Many times I had my soldiers take the 2nd and 3rd AK, and give one back. What they lacked was the will or motive to fight us. It was only the original Bathists and those paid by foreign insurgents/Iran that would actually put up any kind of fight.

If there was a US invasion, as a military officer, I believe we would have the potential to open up a big can of woopass as a nation in a large scale defensive insurgent war, eventually transitioning to a regular conventional fight after the militias were trained and better organized.
 

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