Cheap Bullets/Priceless Grace

December 18th, 2009

Ammo Stacks Make Nice Furniture for Profiteers

Outdoor Marksman has Federal 9mm ammunition for $11.95, if you buy a scant 20 boxes. Not too bad. To me, ten bucks a box is reasonable. We are getting closer to that point. Sellier & Bellot is down to $13 per box at Natchez Shooters Supplies.

It seems like commodities prices aren’t the problem. Copper is getting more expensive, in spite of the bad worldwide economy, but ammunition prices keep dropping. That leads me to suspect that profiteering is the big problem. Obama created an artificial ammunition market by threatening our Constitutional rights, and the people who make and sell ammunition may have been cheating us since it began.

I know there has been a lot of profiteering, because only a fool would believe there was any market justification for a $30 box of FMJ 9mm rounds or a $50 box of primers. But can it really be that greed is responsible for most of the price increases? People are basically evil, but ordinarily, they exhibit some restraint, especially when bad behavior offends their customers.

The folks who tried to corner the market seem to be starting to bleed. I see GP11 480-round battle packs selling on Gunbroker for $259. That’s only $30 above the market price. And a search of completed auctions shows GP11 is not selling. Great. I’m all about capitalism, but cheating people in a time of national upheaval is wrong.

Let’s see what else I can learn.

Hornady 17 HMR V-Max is failing to sell, at $10/50. That’s good news. That would have been an okay price before the Obama crisis.

I’m checking 9mm prices. The prices are a shock to the conscience, and I haven’t found one lot that has sold.

I’m checking 7.62x54mm 7N1, and apart from some sucker paying $285 for a case, it’s not selling.

Maybe the vultures are finally getting caught with excess inventory, as they deserve. Who on earth would pay $15 for Sellier & Bellot? This stuff is one step above throwing rocks. I’ve never had any problems with it, but it’s among the cheapest factory ammo around.

Gunbroker is such a ripoff. It’s virtually useless.

In other news, I had an interesting thought this week. I was thinking about the strange freedom God has given me from overeating, and about my church’s request that I get involved in making food for their cafe.

Back when I was working on my cookbook, I had extraordinary luck with recipes. It seemed like one dish after another was a startling success. I made some stupid things that didn’t work, but I had bizarre victories. For example, I made my coconut flan recipe up in one try, with very little experience to go on. I don’t like baked beans all that much, but I put together a recipe so good, I couldn’t quit eating them.

I got fat, especially after I got pizza under control. I could not stop making and eating delicious food. I couldn’t take the weight off.

Then God took away the compulsion to overeat, and the weight started coming off by itself. I can even resist pizza. And suddenly, my church needed help with their kitchen.

We always want God to give us stuff, and I’m sure he wants to do it. But would he be a good god if he gave us things that hurt us? Of course not. If I had been asked to work in the cafe before I got power over what I ate, it would have been a real problem. There is no way I would have been able to resist stuffing myself. But now I can go in there and cook anything they want, and I know I won’t get fat.

I got the blessing, and I was spared the danger inherent in getting what you wish for. That’s a big deal.

It makes me think about other things I’ve wanted, as well as things other people have wanted. I look at these things and see how they could cause harm if they were suddenly dumped on us.

I strongly suspect that God changes people, through the Holy Spirit and miracles as well as through work and scripture, so that when they get what they want, it will only bless them. I think God is cleaning me up so the good things I want can come my way, without making me rebellious or proud or ungrateful or fat.

We are told that he will give us the desires of our heart (Psalm 34), and that he only gives good gifts (Matthew).

I suppose, then, that if you want a thing, you have to want the power to avoid being harmed by it. If you want money or possessions, you have to want to be freed from greed and covetousness and selfishness. If you want power, you have to want compassion and generosity and gentleness. And if you want to cook for God, you have to want the ability to eat moderately. God doesn’t want to give us new idols or new masters. Doesn’t that sound plausible?

I’ve noticed that the less things control me, the more I enjoy them. I enjoy food a lot more, now that I’m not shoveling it down at every opportunity. I enjoy the things I own, now that they aren’t as exciting as they once were. I wonder what’s next.

The more you surrender, the more you win. That’s how it seems to work.

Maybe this is why many people who give to ministries and charities have little money. They overspend, they default on debts, they borrow at outrageous interest, and then they expect God to give them cash because they max out their credit cards to support missionaries and charities. How can God possibly repay them in kind, before he makes them fit vessels? Would you pour water into a reservoir with holes in it? And besides, what if these people gave money God never asked them to give, because they didn’t ask for his guidance? And if you give to a ministry while you cheat a creditor, whose money did you give? Not yours; that’s for sure. You stole from another person in order to give to God. Is he supposed to encourage that?

I think the charismatic “word of faith” crowd needs to think about these things. I don’t doubt that God wants to do stuff for us, but you shouldn’t ask him to be an enabler.

So once again, I have more to be grateful for than I realized. That’s the bottom line. If you can’t be grateful for discipline and instruction, you are utterly lost.

10 Responses to “Cheap Bullets/Priceless Grace”

  1. Milo Says:

    Sellier and Bellot isn’t bad at all, especially the 32acp.
    Try to find some Privi Partisan at a good price now, very decent ammo.
    Unfortunately the plant blew up so this stuff may be hard to find.

    Shotgun ammo never took the dramatic jumps in price that rifle and handgun ammo did and suprisingly, neither did most of the sporting rifle ammo.
    .243s were $19.99 a box before obami, stayed at $19.99 a box during the spike, and are still $19.99 a box with 10% off if you buy ten boxes of which I usually do.

    Summation, your opinion of the market is justified.

  2. Aaron's cc: Says:

    45 ACP is still over .45/bullet at OM. .35-.40/bullet for reloads. It’s heading in the right direction.

  3. David Says:

    Steve,

    My understanding of the phrase “give me the desires of my heart” is not that God fulfills the desire, giving us what we presently want, but that He, in a sense, “overwrites” the file itself. He gives us new desires, not the objects of present desires. God doesn’t give us what we shouldn’t want – He makes us want the same things that He wants.

    Long-time reader,

    David Griesemer

  4. Steve H. Says:

    That’s a point I should have acknowledged in this post.
    .
    In my experience, it has worked both ways. I wouldn’t presume to say that all the desires I had before I drew close to God were evil or that God did not play a part in putting them in me.

  5. Mike Says:

    People bought up ammo because they were afraid of Obama. People were afraid of Obama from the start for good reason… But now that things are going wrong for Obama, now is the time to really be afraid. History tells us that when things go wrong, he is going to look for a dragon to slay, or a (great evil) enemy to divert our attention from his failures. To divert and focus hatred to a common enemy. And the press is likely to provide all the assistance Obama needs.
    Just like you know who did to the Jews in the 30’s.

  6. Steve H. Says:

    Do I still have time to stock up? Assuming a batting average of .500, I can only kill a few thousand hippies with current reserves. I would have to resort to threatening them with soap and mouthwash.

  7. Milo Says:

    You should keep a minimum of 500 rounds for each weapon if you can.
    I only keep between 100-200 rounds for the .243 but I only use it for shooting coyote and rarely target shoot with it.

    I will keep at least 2000 .223 and .308 at any given time and at least 1000 rounds each of 9mm and .45
    5000 .22lr

    Life is good when you have a bunker! 🙂

  8. HTRN Says:

    Gun sales are still significantly higher than they were 2 years ago – NICS did 1.2 million checks for November, vs. barely a million 2 years ago(last November it topped 1.5 million).

    So sales have calmed down since last winters insanity, but it’s still higher than it was before.

  9. Bobsled Bob Says:

    Crank up the reloader , then come to berkeley and help out taking care of the hippies- esp the grey haired pony tailed ones…

  10. rightisright Says:

    Gunbroker does suck… for ammo.
    .
    However, there are good deals to be found on guns. If you know what you are looking for and what it SHOULD sell for.