When I was in high school back in the early '70s - 1970 to 1974, to be exact - we had a rifle team. That might sound strange to some folks today, but back then, it was just part of school life. We'd meet after class, shoulder our .22s, and learn the fine art of marksmanship - breathing control, trigger squeeze, discipline. It wasn't about violence. It was about responsibility. It was about pride. Looking back, I've come to realize that what we were really learning wasn't just how to shoot - we were learning what it means to be American.
When I say I grew up with this culture, I am not blowing smoke up your kilt lass. I remember being fifteen or sixteen, before I had a driver's license or even a parking pass at the high school, I would board the school bus with a long gun in a soft case. Sometimes it was my .22 for rifle team practice; other times it was a shotgun if I was heading over to a buddy's house after school where we would go small game hunting. I'd hand it over to the assistant principal for safekeeping, then pick it up at the end of the day. Folks today would blink twice at that - maybe call it crazy - but we treated it like a privilege. You handled that gun like you handled your honor: with care, with respect, and knowing you'd answer to your parents if you didn't. That bus, that office, that handoff - small acts, sure - but they were the everyday practice of a freedom culture: responsibility in private that keeps liberty safe in public.
Every great culture has a code. The Japanese had
Bushido, the "way of the warrior." It wasn't just about fighting; it was about living with honor, discipline, and respect. The samurai carried the
katana not as a weapon of conquest, but as a symbol of duty - a reminder that strength and virtue must go hand in hand.
Here in America, we've got our own version of that code. I like to call it the
American Freedom Culture. Our "sword" isn't the katana - it's the firearm. It represents the same ideals: independence, craftsmanship, courage, and the willingness to take responsibility for your own safety and freedom.
The Gunsmiths of LibertyFrom the old gunmakers in Easton and Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, to the craftsmen of Kentucky and Tennessee, America's early gunsmiths weren't just building tools - they were building freedom. Those Pennsylvania Long Rifles were the katanas of the frontier. They were elegant, accurate, and made by hand. Each one carried the mark of its maker, just like a sword signed by a Japanese smith.
Fast forward to today, and that tradition is alive and well. Modern gunsmiths - men and women working in garages, sheds, and small workshops - are still building rifles with the same care and pride. Eugene Stoner's AR-15 is a perfect example of how that spirit of innovation never died. Lightweight, modular, precise - it's the American rifle for a free people, designed by a man who understood the value of adaptability and craftsmanship.
More Than a ToolNow, don't get me wrong - I'm not romanticizing violence. The firearm, like the sword of old, is a symbol. It's a reminder that freedom is something you must be prepared to defend, even if you never have to. Owning a firearm - and knowing how to use it safely and responsibly - is part of what keeps that spirit of independence alive. It's not about fear; it's about self-reliance and respect.
When we had rifle teams in schools, the message wasn't "be dangerous." The message was "be disciplined." It was about steady hands and clear minds. Those lessons stuck with a lot of us, even as the teams disappeared. The culture didn't die - it just changed shape. You see it today in the 4-H Shooting Sports programs, in local ranges, and in everyday Americans who still believe that citizenship means being capable, informed, and ready.
Our Way of the WarriorThe Japanese had
Bushido. We have something just as meaningful - a way of life built around freedom, personal responsibility, and craftsmanship. Call it the
American Freedom Culture if you want. I sure do.
Because at its heart, this isn't about politics or slogans. It's about a belief that liberty isn't given - it's earned. It's preserved by people who are willing to learn, to train, to build, and to stand up when it matters. The tools may be different - steel and powder instead of folded iron - but the spirit is the same. The American rifle, like the samurai's sword, reflects the character of the one who holds it. And if we ever forget that, we lose more than a skill - we lose part of who we are.
