“Get A Shotgun” Is The Wrong Answer to The Right Question

Shotgun Racking
Shotgun Racking

In February 2013, then Vice President Joe Biden gave what is probably the most widely circulated home defense recommendation in American political history. Standing in front of a crowd in Danbury, Connecticut, he explained that he’d told his wife Jill that if something went bump in the night, she should walk out on the balcony with their double-barrel shotgun and fire two rounds into the air.

He was roundly mocked (firing warning shots is inadvisable for reasons both legal and tactical) but the underlying premise got largely a free pass. Get a shotgun for home defense. The advice itself was so deeply embedded in gun culture that even his critics mostly argued about the warning shot, not the platform.

It’s worth asking where that advice actually came from. Not the Biden version specifically, but the broader cultural consensus that if you’re new to firearms and need something for the house, your first stop should be the shotgun rack. Who built that consensus, and did they build it for you?

The short answer is: they didn’t. And both American firearms manufacturers and gun buyers have been voting against it for ten years.

By Michael Crites

Michael Crites has served as executive editor of AmericanFirearms.org since 2016 and previously held positions as associate editor and range correspondent dating back to 2000. He discovered his passion for precision shooting at age 12 during his first visit to his grandfather's shooting range, eventually earning an Expert classification in three different shooting disciplines before age 18. During his studies at University of Wyoming, he earned four varsity letters on the collegiate rifle and pistol teams, serving as team captain for three consecutive years. He became the first UW student to complete the NRA Range Safety Officer certification while maintaining full-time student status. He graduated magna cum laude with a B.A. in Sports Communications. His diverse career has included roles as Range Safety Coordinator for the National Rifle Championships in Camp Perry 2001; editor-in-chief, Precision Shooter Quarterly; series editor, Modern Firearms Handbook collection; managing editor, National Shooting Sports Foundation Newsletter; editor, Competitive Shooter Magazine; operations director for Western Arms & Ammunition Co.; senior editor for the Shooter's Reference Annual (Cheyenne); content director for The Firearms Report, published by the American Shooting Coalition in Billings, MT; firearms correspondent for Hunting & Shooting, produced by Outdoor Sports Media Group in Jackson, WY; and publisher for Wyoming Shooting Sports Journal in Casper. He has contributed as a regular columnist for American Rifleman (NRA Publications), technical editor for Precision, a publication of the National Bench Rest Shooters Association (Phoenix, AZ); and as firearms specialist for the Gun Owner's Annual. As a digital content creator, he has written more than 400 articles on AmericanFirearms.org, developed shooting technique coverage for the Brownells Shooting Blog (Montezuma, IA) and Federal Premium "Range Notes" platform (Anoka, MN), and served as lead content strategist for International Defensive Pistol Association (Berryville, AR). Beyond Tactical Firearms, his current endeavors include content development for the Wyoming State Rifle Association (Cheyenne, WY) and technical manual production for High Plains Publishing of Laramie, WY. He has contributed to the 12th, 13th, and 14th editions of Modern Sporting Rifles Guide and edited The Complete Guide to Tactical Shooting and Competitive Shooter's Reference Manual (Gun Digest Books).

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